Insightful Writer, Anas Amereyaw Anas, has declined the greeting of an Accra High Court to show his face to previous Ghana Football Affiliation (GFA) President, Kwesi Nyantakyi, in the appointed authority’s chambers prior to affirming in an open court behind his brand name cover.
Anas, on the other hand, claims that he is unable to reveal his identity in the chamber or any other such public location due to the potential security implications of this action.
His private investigation firm, Tiger Eye PI, stated in a statement:
“Under these conditions, prudence requires that he decline the invitation to endanger his life and, consequently, decline the invitation to reveal his identity to the defendant in the judges’ chamber or any other location.”
Anas must reveal his identity in the judge’s chamber, despite living his public life behind masks for obvious security reasons. However, the court would allow him to testify in public while concealing himself.
However, Anas claims that he has learned his lesson after Ahmed Suale, Anas’ protégé and Number 12 lead reporter, was brutally killed just a few months after the scandalous documentary was released.
“The late Ahmed Hussein Suale was killed out so everyone can see in 2019, around the same time that he had commitment with the Principal legal officer’s office on his declaration against the litigant,” the Tiger Eye PI explanation made sense of.
In addition, the statement claimed that Suale was attacked after Assin Central Constituency MP Kennedy Agyapong revealed his identity on social media and national television.
Ahmed Suale was the most important witness against Nyantakyi, but Anas offered to stand in for him after he was killed. The assertion proceeded with that preceding his death, Ahmed Suale had gotten demise dangers.
The statement read, “As much as Anas is willing and ready to testify for the prosecution, doing so under the condition specified by the court presents a clear and present danger to his security and safety, especially because of the issues chronicled above,” and it continued, “As much as Anas is willing and ready to testify for the prosecution.”
The assertion additionally claimed that the choice to decline the greeting is likewise propelled by the activities of private and state entertainers who are keen on subverting the tasks of the insightful writer and his secret strategies.
However, Tiger Eye will continue to fight against societal problems and corruption with unwavering determination. According to the statement, “Anas is still in good spirits and is grateful to the good people of Ghana for their support and protection.”
Foundation
Kwesi Nyantakyi is as of now confronting preliminary after Anas’ analytical narrative, Number 12, caught him getting gifts and money to impact choices in the football space.
The state had previously applied to the High Court in Accra for Anas to testify in chambers; however, the accused’s lawyers filed a lawsuit with the Supreme Court to overturn the High Court’s decision.
The defendant’s request was eventually granted by the Supreme Court on the grounds that the case should have been started with a formal application, not an oral one.
Be that as it may, when the case was approached Wednesday, May 17, 2023, for a decision on one more application on Anas Aremeyaw Anas affirming in-camera, the adjudicator conceded the application in parts.
The columnist, whose examination prompted Nyantakyi leaving a few football posts, had prior guaranteed his life would be at serious risk on the off chance that he affirms in court.
In June 2018, Nyantakyi was caught on film tolerating $65,000 in real money from columnist Anas Aremeyaw Anas acting like a covert usable.
BBC Africa’s Africa Eye, the unit that conducts investigations, broadcast the footage. The money, according to Nyantakyi, was part of a sponsorship deal for the Ghana Football Association, which Nyantakyi had led since 2005.
The deal, on the other hand, was started by the reporters to expose Nyantakyi’s alleged wrongdoing.
Because of the narrative’s disclosures, Nyantakyi lost his situation as FIFA Gathering Part and first VP of CAF, the Confederation of African Football.
He was also banned by FIFA for life, but an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sports reduced his ban to 15 years in October 2020.