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Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Opanin Agyekum’s passionate appeal to the nation


LET’S BURY OUR DIFFERENCE
…and move the country forward

Posted: The Chronicle Wednesday, December 7, 2000
By Charles Takyi-Boadu
Unfolding events across the length and breadth of the country after the just-ended Presidential elections has compelled one of the respected opinion leaders in the country, Dr. Kofi Agyekum popularly referred to as Opanin Agyekum to make a passionate appeal to Ghanaians.
Whilst admitting that he does not have any evidence whatsoever to back claims being made by both the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP) and opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) of unfair treatment of its members in their strongholds, he noted that it would be proper for each and every Ghanaian to bury their individual and collective differences for the country to move forward irrespective of which party is in power.
He thus stressed the need for the alleged humiliations and taunting that has characterised the aftermath of the elections to cease in order not to further inflame passions.
Opanin Agyekum who happens to be a senior lecturer at the linguistics department of the University of Ghana, Legon made this appeal in an exclusive interview with The Chronicle yesterday.
He therefore appealed to all Ghanaians to remain calm.
“Now that we have declared one of the candidates as President, we must all rally behind him for the development of the country because there is nothing that can change it”, he emphasised.
The learned fellow also had course to caution the media especially the radio stations against taking advantage of the situation to make comments and statements which has the tendency of degenerating into controversies and chaos. “For any time that you utter something, even a single sentence. Take that there are people who can analyse your sentence better than you yourself can do and if you are able to do that I will warn against inflammatory statements especially those that bother on ethnicity and tribalism, we should be moving forward”, he advised.
To the newspapers, the man whose virtues had earned him a place in the National Peace Council (NPC) said “it better to remain neutral newspaper than to be too partisan, when you do that you loss your objectivity.”
Now that the elections
“Then peoples attitude towards work should remain as steadfast as possible irrespective of whether your party is in power or not”, he said, stressing “even if your party is in power and you don’t have any profession and you don’t work, you’ll go hungry.”

Tsatsu released from incarceration




By Charles Takyi-Boadu


Posted: The Chronicle Wednesday, January 07, 2009



Tsatsu TsikataHours to the end of his term of office, President J. A. Kufuor has extended warm courtesies to certain individuals, who through their own actions or inactions found themselves in the grips of the law, during his tenure of office.
He has thus granted free, absolute and unconditional pardon to former Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana National Petroleum Authority (GNPC), Tsatsu Tsikata, former Finance Minister, Kwame Peprah, former Youth and Sports Minister, Mallam Yusif Issah, former Agric. Minister, Ibrahim Adams.
The rest include former Chief Director of the Finance Ministry, George Sepah-Yankey and Akenteng Appiah- Menkah and former Trade Minister, Dan Abodakpi.
A statement signed by Deputy Information and National Orientation Minister, Frank Agyekum said the individuals were part of some 500 people pardoned “under his prerogative of mercy as enshrined in article 72 of the constitution.
In his wisdom, the President also granted amnesty to all first-time offenders who have served more than half of their term and nursing mothers found guilty of non-bailable offences. The sentences on all death row have been committed to life imprisonment whilst those on death row who have served more than 10years have had their sentences reduced to 20years.
Though counsel for Tsatsu, Tony Lithur confirmed having received information of his client’s release, he was not sure on what grounds his client was granted the pardon.
Whilst admitting that very credible sources told him that his client had been granted unconditional pardon, he wondered what might have motivated the release, asking rhetorically -“why at this time.”
Knowing Tsatsu and what he stands for, Mr. Lithur stressed that his client would be upset about what has happened, considering the fact that he remains innocent of the charges leveled against him.
Meanwhile, Tsatus’s brother, Fui Tsikata has told Joy news that he preferred to treat the news of his brother’s release as a rumour, until he hears an official pronouncement confirming the story, adding that it is only President Kufuor who could offer a better explanation for the release.
For him, Tsatsu was never guilty of the offence he was tried for, and stressed that the granting of the pardon imposes certain disabilities on him, which cannot be cured.
Left to him alone, he would have preferred that Tsatsu was acquitted through the same court process which incarcerated him.
Under the current circumstance, Fui noted that his brother may never be able to stand for certain public offices in the country, such as President or vice President.
He however, noted that his brother could not be discharged from the Cardiothoracic Centre of the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, where he was treated for acute asthma last November, and that they are only waiting for directives from the doctors in that regard.
Sources close to the Korle-Bu Hospital, where Tsatsu has been hospitalized for the past two or so months, told The Chronicle that prison guards assigned to him had been withdrawn.
Tsatsu was handed a 5year jail sentence on June 18, 2008, by a Fast Track High court, presided over by Justice Henrietta Abban for causing financial loss to the state.
The court handed down the sentence on the former GNPC boss after the trial judge found Tsikata guilty on all four counts of willfully causing financial loss to the state, and intentionally misapplying public property on a limited liability company.
Tsikata, a legal luminary, who dribbled the legal system for almost six years, was sentenced for five years imprisonment on each of the four counts to run concurrently.