
Nana Yaa Jantuah has taken aim at the opposition New Patriotic Party over its commentary on the case of former MASLOC CEO Sedina Tamakloe-Attionu, arguing the party has no moral standing to weigh in.
Speaking on Adom FM’s morning show on Monday, Jantuah insisted that NPP members should steer clear of the conversation entirely, pointing instead to unresolved questions within their own ranks.
“They should keep quiet because they have their own matters to deal with,” she said, a comment clearly aimed at redirecting attention toward ongoing investigations involving former Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta. Her argument hinges on a familiar political logic: that credibility on corruption matters can’t be claimed selectively.
Her remarks land at a particularly charged moment. Tamakloe-Attionu was recently extradited from the United States to Ghana to begin serving a 10-year prison sentence, the result of her 2024 conviction on multiple corruption-related charges tied to her time at the helm of MASLOC. That extradition alone had already reignited public debate before Jantuah’s comments added a fresh partisan edge to the story.
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The exchange is unlikely to be the last word. Jantuah’s comments are expected to deepen the broader, ongoing dispute between the NDC and NPP over accountability — specifically, who gets to claim the moral high ground on prosecuting alleged corruption involving former public officials. As both parties continue trading accusations, the underlying question of consistent accountability standards seems likely to remain unresolved for some time.