The Member of Parliament for North Tongu, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, says he uses part of his salary as an MP to dig for information about the National Cathedral project.
The former Deputy Minister of Education denied reports that he is being sponsored by some anti-Christ groups to investigate the controversial project.
Ablakwa said he will not entertain such offers, if there was, because he is a Christian and regards it as the best religion for him.
“I don’t have funding from any external sources. I just use my salary to do the work I do. I am just sacrificing a little of what I am paid to do.
“Sometimes I hear people suggest that maybe I am supported by some anti-Christ groups. That is not true and I won’t even entertain that. I believe Christianity is the best of religions,”
The MP recently published fresh and surprising revelations about the project following his visit to the USA.
In a Facebook post on May 4, Mr Ablakwa posted a series of documents to back up his claims that the project is fraught with criminal activity.
The MP’s evidence suggests that the National Cathedral of Ghana had registered a subsidiary in Washington under a different name and with different “governors” – the American term for trustees.
He also provided documents to claim that a deceased person’s details were used in the registration of the National Cathedral’s fundraising arm in the US.
Ablakwa alleged that a dead Hispanic’s details were used to register the American fundraising wing, which the Cathedral Secretariat described as a Special Purpose Vehicle (SP), in March 2021.
“Painstaking and unimpeachable investigations shockingly reveal that the March 2021 incorporation of the National Cathedral of Ghana and Bible Museum Foundation, Inc in Washington, D.C. was criminally executed through IDENTITY THEFT.”
