Private legal practitioner Richard Nii Armah has clarified that former Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta’s newly acquired permanent residency in the United States provides absolutely no shield against potential extradition.
This clarification follows a recent ruling by a United States immigration court, which approved the former minister’s application to adjust his immigration status and proceed toward lawful permanent residency.
The decision has sparked intense public debate in Ghana, with some observers claiming that the legal status change will make it incredibly difficult to bring him back to the country should the need arise.
However, Mr. Nii Armah dismissed these concerns, stating that the court’s decision has no bearing whatsoever on the extradition process.
He stressed that permanent residency and extradition are two entirely different legal mechanisms governed by distinct bodies of law and enforced by separate institutions.
While an immigration court solely determines whether a foreign national is entitled to remain in the United States under domestic immigration law, an extradition proceeding evaluates whether an individual should be surrendered to another nation under the terms of an international treaty.
“The fact that Ken Ofori-Atta has secured permanent residency does not automatically shield him from extradition,” Nii Armah explained. “If we file our processes and we succeed, we may get him extradited. But one thing we have to acknowledge is that the extradition process is not an easy journey. Especially when Ken Ofori-Atta has hired top lawyers in the US to defend him, that is also another issue.”
To illustrate his point, the legal practitioner cited historical precedents of individuals who attempted to leverage their legal status in foreign nations to block extradition.
He pointed directly to the famous WikiLeaks saga, noting how Julian Assange utilised the legal system to fight his extradition in a high-profile battle that spanned roughly 14 years before reaching its conclusion in the United Kingdom.
By: Rainbowradioonline.com/Ghana













