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Wednesday, July 8, 2009

APPIAH OFORI TO BE AXED FROM NPP

…For opening his mouth too wide
…But MP calls NPP’s bluff
Posted: Wednesday, July 8, 2009.


By Charles Takyi-Boadu
It is now certain that the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) will apply the stiffest form of punishment on its own Member of Parliament for Asikuma-Odoben-Brakwa, P.C Appiah Ofori who responds to the title of an anti-corruption crusader.
If what General Secretary of the party, Nana Ohene-Ntow is saying is anything worth considering, then, it is most certain that the MP faces a possible expulsion or suspension from the NPP.
“We want Mr. Appiah Ofori to understand that he is not an independent Member of Parliament, it could be that he crossed or to leave the party but we would apply the rules of the party and whatever the rules dictate, we will implement those rules”, he emphasised.
The rules of the NPP, according to him, dictates ‘if anybody consistently drags the name of the party in the mud, and refuses to make amends, that person ought to be sanctioned’, by means of suspension or expulsion.
This follows allegations he made to the committee tasked to investigate the sale of Ghana Telecom (GT) to Vodafone to the effect that some of his colleague MP’s in the NPP benefited from the deal since according to him, they were paid US $5,000 to vote in favour of the sale the company when it came to Parliament.
Nana Ohene-Ntow yesterday told Joy Fm’s ‘Supers Morning show’ host, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah “we will take a firm decision before the close of this week.”
Latest by the end of Friday, he noted that the party would communicate its decision to the MP who is currently attending an agric workshop/conference in Britain.
He said the party was now fed up with Appiah Ofori’s indecision and his tantrums since it is causing a lot of disaffection for the NPP.
Under the current, he said the leadership of the party have been meeting to decide on which of the two options (expulsion or suspension) to impose on the MP who is seen as not just a seen as a ‘loud mouth’ but also a ‘black sheep’ in the party considering the way and manner in which he continuous to put the party’s name and image in bad light.
According to him, what Mr. Appiah has sought to do over the years is to undermine the cohesion and cooperation of the NPP, which he said does not augur well for the unity of the party.
He imagined how their political opponents, especially their colleagues in the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) jumping at it and making a mountain out of a molehill when the allegations are indeed not true.
The General Secretary stressed the belief that the MP in question may have some other motive behind what he has been doing either than what he merely claims to be fighting or exposing corruption, as he wants Ghanaians to believe.
Asked whether might want to sanction Mr Appiah Ofori for the simple reason that he is not playing to the gallery, Ohen-Ntow said that was far from the question, stressing that every organisation has got rules which its members are to subscribe to.
“After all, it’s a question of reaching compromises and building consensus, if on a consistent basis, a person shows that they (he) cannot go with the tenets of the group or an association, I think the next normal thing to do is to say that, look, this is a bunch of crooks, you people are unholy, you are unclean, I can’t live with you because am too holy and am too clean for your environment”, he stressed.
In any case, he said, P.C Appiah Ofori has a choice to resign from the party if he feels uncomfortable in their company.
As a man who is supposed to be a “honourable’ Member of the country’s august Parliament, Ohene-Ntow wondered the kind of intimate things Mr. Appiah Ofori he goes on radio to say about his own family, stressing ‘those things could even embarrass the party.”
He did not see the need for the party to investigate the matter since according to him, it is not true and has no basis for any such investigations, asking rhetorically “why did he withdraw that letter he sent to the Chief of Staff in the first place?”, saying “we don’t have anything to investigate.”
“I mean, there is just too much that this man has done, we’ve tried, we discussed, he will come and apologise, am sorry, the next day there is another thing, I think it is about time”, he noted.
But Mr Appiah Ofori in a recent interview with The Chronicle said nobody could remove him from the party and dared anybody to take the initiative.
He called the bluff of those calling for him to be expelled from the party.
He says nobody can remove him from the party since there are laws and laid down procedures governing the party.
Until those procedures are followed, he says “I will not resign and nobody can remove me from the party because of this.”
This was in reaction to calls by some members of his own party and Political Science Lecturer at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Kwasi Amakye who are calling for the anti-corruption crusader to be sacked from the party for his critical nature of certain actions of members and officials of the party.
“If I have accused my party of being corrupt, I should be placed before the appropriate disciplinary committee to be probed and it is found out that indeed I have accused my own party of corrupt practices, the appropriate disciplinary action should be taken against me”, he emphasized.
If not, he noted “then leave these nonentities to their own devices.”
He however indicated his preparedness to resign from the party if a properly constituted committee of enquiry finds him guilty of having flouted the NPPs constitution.
In the absence of this, he says he will continue to be a member of the party and thus called the bluff of those asking for him to be expelled from the party or better still resign since according to him, their concerns are misplaced.
“If I speak against corruption and somebody says by so-doing I’m bringing down the party’s image, by so-doing I’m not going by what the party wants, am not applying myself to party aspirations and programmes, by implication, he is saying that the party is against the fight against corruption, the party condones and connives such corrupt practices, the itself is involved in corrupt practices, so anytime I speak against it, then I’m speaking against the party”, he noted.
He thus wondered why people could read such weird meanings into his stance against corruption which is fast creeping into the Ghanaian moral fibre.
In any case, he noted that if he should go contrary to the provisions of the party’s constitution, it behoves on the disciplinary committee to give him a fair hearing and give him an opportunity to defend himself.
If the committee finds his conduct to be wrong, he said “they should pronounce or announce my expulsion to the National Executive Committee (NEC), if I am not satisfied, I can also appeal to the National Council.”
He therefore emphasized that people like Kwasi Amakye and those asking for him to be sacked or resign from the party does not know exactly what they are talking about since according to him, they are not familiar with the party’s constitution which prescribes procedures to follow when such matters arise.
Mr. Appiah-Ofori could not comprehend why anybody would call on him to resign for referring to certain public servants as ‘thieves’ when an Auditor-General’s report has indicted for having embezzled or stolen state funds, asking rhetorically “if I say this, have I spoken against the party?, If the Auditor-General comes to say that public servants have looted the country and I repeat this, have I spoken against the party.”
Kwasi Amakye on Monday asked the leadership of the NPP to expel Mr. Appiah-Ofori from the party for his critical nature of the party, stressing “"Those who choose to be members of an organization would definitely like to work for it to succeed. Generally, these activities involve conflicts, and everybody would necessarily not agree to issues when they come up, but you don't go out publicly to take a stance against your party, to me that is the position of Appiah-Ofori in the NPP," he stressed.
He wondered whether the MP has ever sat down with the executives of the party to suggest to them solutions to problems in the party, and act in away that would help the party realize its aspirations.



Monday, July 6, 2009

Hawkers play hide and seek with police

Posted:The Chronicle / Monday, July 06, 2009



By Charles Takyi Boadu


Displaced hawkers at the Accra Central Business district, who were affected by the recent decongestion exercise embarked upon by the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA), appear to be defiant of the city authority’s directive to leave the streets and pavements of Accra for the Pedestrian Shopping Mall.

Most of these displaced hawkers are still lurking in front of stores, biding their time to return to the streets and pavements when the security personnel policing the area finally leave.

When The Chronicle went round the principal streets and pavements of the Central Business district of Accra, and the Kwame Nkrumah Circle, where most of these people were affected last week Thursday, it realised that most of the hawkers were playing what could best be described as ‘hide-and-seek’ with the law enforcement agencies.

At the Rawlings Park in Accra, some of the displaced hawkers were seen hovering around the pavements, whilst others lurked in front of shops in readiness to go back to the streets when the security details leave.

The situation at the Kwame Nkrumah circle was a different ball game from what was discovered in the Accra Business district.

Here, most of these hawkers were seen doing brisk business on the pavements, since there were no security personnel to sack them.

Asked why they were still loitering on the pavements, and not going to occupy the much-talked-about Pedestrian Shopping Mall, part of which was still empty, most of these hawkers said for one reason or the other, people (buyers) do not take delight in coming to buy at the market.

Others also said they were harassed and driven away whenever they go to some other markets to trade their wares. This, according to them, was because they do not have regular places there, and therefore end up blocking people’s displayed wares.

Meanwhile, some of the affected hawkers said they had contracted loans from the various banks, ranging between GH¢500 – GH¢ 5,000, and do not know where to get those monies to go and service the loans.

The hawkers did not also understand why the shopping mall at circle was built in two sections, with a lorry station in the middle.

According to them, one could get everything he or she wants to buy at the first section of the market, and would therefore not go to the second section, popularly known as ‘Tuobodom’.

For this reason, they said they had nowhere to go unless the AMA gives them a better alternative.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Ahwoi Weeps for Selormey, Peprah Others

Posted: The Chronicle wednesday, July 1, 2009.


By Charles Takyi-Boadu
Food and Agriculture Minister, Kwesi Ahwoi, yesterday showed how emotionally attached he was to the much talked-about Aveyime rice project, which is situated in the Volta region.
This was when he was responding to queries from The Chronicle about the current state of affairs of the project when his Ministry took its turn at the meet-the-press series in Accra, yesterday.
"It is too emotional for me; I don't normally want to talk, I just want to see and work at getting that project deliver for the sake of my brothers whose lives have been messed up because they have been to jail not on account of corruption, but administrative mishap perpetrated by the Manager of the project at that time", he said.
For the fate that he and his other colleague Ministers were made to suffer, Mr. Ahwoi has committed himself to make the project one of the most vibrant in the country, to prove his doubters wrong. "We are proving that the project is viable and it will produce the rice that we want to see."
Mr. Ahwoi could not fathom the circumstance under which his colleagues were prosecuted and subsequently sent to jail, stressing "not that they stole any rice, they didn't eat a cup of rice, they didn't steal US $1.00 but the project called Aveyime that was being mismanaged by the then management sent my colleague Ministers, my friends and brothers to jail." That notwithstanding, he said "so we are back and thank God we are now in charge and we are running Aveyime again."
According to him, the Aveyime rice project which has been decked with so many controversies is that the controversial project has been conceived and become viable. Like all other projects, he noted that it could have gone astray since it happens everywhere.
He noted that for the crimes and iniquities of the Managers of the said project, he and his other colleagues had to suffer, saying "granted that we suffered, all the equipment that came for this project, the tax payers money that were used in bringing those equipment, the plane that was to spray the farm, the tractors, the silos, the rice mill which was described by the witnesses at that time as first class, were deliberately allowed by the then government to go waste."
The Food and Agriculture Minister described it as a fantastic project, indicating that with just one pump, out of the remaining 40 which is lying obsolete, he noted that they have already cultivated 300 hectares of the land and will do the next 300 hectares sometime soon.
According to him, they have harvested the first 80 hectares of rice from the farm. Obviously not happy with the fate he and his other colleagues were made to suffer, Mr. Ahwoi could not but asked "if we had not been political myopic and we had allowed this project to run 8years ago, can you imagine where this country will be by now in our rice exports?" Under the current circumstance, he noted that the government has no other option than to revamp the project and make it viable.