Tuesday,
December 18, 2012
Folks, the NPP’s “Concert Party”
is turning ugly at this stage. Nerves are being strained to the breaking point
and, if care is not taken, the situation in the party may take a sudden turn
for the worse.
There seems to be no common purpose in the elephant family nor
is there any firm agreement among its main actors that the intended court
action will be the solution to the party’s fast-fading public image.
Charles Yves Wereko-Brobby, the
Tarzan, has stuck his neck out to point the party in a new direction, ruffling
feathers in the process and pitting himself (and unknown others backing him)
against the militant forces rallying behind Akufo-Addo to fight the Electoral
Commission, the NDC, and the media at the Supreme Court.
The circus is agitated and the
elephants are locking trunks to give the audience a rare sneak peek into the
workings of their democratic culture. Some democrats they are!
Isn’t it very interesting that
these so-called liberal democrats can’t accommodate each other’s views on how
to fight a common battle to redeem their party’s image without spitting fire? Isn’t
it very intriguing for them to be at each other’s throat just because they can’t
tolerate any dissension from within? Just because one of them has gone out of
his way to express opinions that threaten the status quo in the party?
Well, Wereko-Brobby has braved
the storm and is calling for means other than the intended court action to
fight the party’s cause. Even before his suggestion sinks, he is being trashed
for daring to propose what confronts the hallmark of the “Mate me ho” culture.
The locking of trunks by these
human elephants at this stage has given the “Concert Party” a new dose of
zaniness. The Tarzan seems to be ill-prepared for the circus performance and
wants to opt out, contrary to expectation.
The
NPP claims it has incontrovertible evidence to prove that the EC inflated
figures and is confident the Supreme Court will overturn the verdict in Akufo-Addo’s
favour. But the Tarzan thinks otherwise. To him, the party will serve its
purposes better if it lets sleeping dogs lie and pursues better options that
will lead to its rebuilding and re-strategizing for Election 2016 and beyond.
According
to him, the failure on the part of the party’s national leadership to map out
strategies to effectively police the ballot caused their defeat. That is the
painful truth that his opponents don’t want to be told. And for telling it as
it is, he emerges as a threat to them to be silenced or weeded out ultimately
if he continues to prick their balloon. They hate being poked where it hurts.
That
is why four prominent members of the party (Nana Akomea, Fred Oware, Appiah-Ofori,
and Kwabena Agyepong) have unreservedly jumped on him to set the stage for his
flaying. Poor Tarzan.
But
he may not be alone, which is what will worsen the wrangling and stretch the
leaders’ patience taut while the party’s own fabric risks being torn. I can
foresee where this confusion will lead them, and will not be surprised if they
continue to hide behind lies and orchestrations to bamboozle their followers
while devising exit strategies to save their own skin.
One may question why this caustic
verbal attack on the Tarzan for merely suggesting the obviously reasonable
course of action to take in order not to prolong the needless self-destruction
and harming of the party’s image. He is merely suggesting that the party has
more to gain by restraining itself. Yet, that opinion seems distasteful to
those who know nothing but the self-destructive mode now in operation.
By deigning to tell them what
they least prepared themselves to hear from within, the Tarzan has stepped on
huge toes and is regarded as the party’s dirty linen to be washed in public.
Appiah-Ofori (MP for
Asikuma-Odobeng-Brakwa) has already torn his public image into shreds, questioning his intellectual ability and
insulting him as someone whose “level of intelligence is very low.” For such an old man to descend into
the gutter this way speaks volumes. The Tarzan soaks it up.
Speaking
on Asempa FM’s Ekosii Sen programme on Monday, Appiah-Ofori described as
unfortunate the position taken by Tarzan, adding that his (Wereko-Brobby’s)
argument lacks logical reasoning. Thus, with that low Intelligence Quotient,
“Wereko-Brobby must go back to school because I don’t expect someone like him
with a doctorate degree to speak like this; I am very surprised” he opined.
His
claim is that “no true NPP member will allow the will of the people to be
subverted by some unscrupulous EC officials who are only concerned about their own
well-being.”
What is
Wereko-Brobby’s crime, if I may ask? Simple: expressing his opinion that the
NPP lost the elections because its own organizers and polling agents did not do
their duties diligently. He definitely set himself on a collision course and will
be expected to outlive his welcome in the circus.
Let’s
remember that Tarzan is no ordinary activist of the NPP but a founding member.
Even though he broke away to form his own political party to contest the 2004
elections, he returned to the NPP fold and served under Kufuor as the Chief
Executive of the Volta River Authority, where he went overboard in pursuing
policies that led to his downfall.
Kufuor
uplifted him again to preside over the celebration of Ghaha@50 only for him to
be dragged before court by the Mills government but saved by the bell (Justice Marful-Sau freed him and Kwadwo Mpiani on technical grounds).
He
has maintained a somehow low profile but is active in the workings of the NPP.
For him to come out the way he did to express strong skepticism about the
party’s chances of winning the court case against the EC suggests that he knows
what is afoot. He is no stranger to controversy, though, and will have to brace
himself up for the onslaught and consequences.
I
suspect that moves will be made to deal with him the way those considered as
errant in the party have been treated. I expect them to ostracize him as they
did to Arthur Kennedy for daring to expose their weaknesses in his post-2008
elections book (Chasing the Elephant into
the Bush). That is nothing strange because it is the modus operandi of
those who hate to be shown the other side of the coin.
Already,
some snippets of information have it that he is a mole within the party. Some
gossipping fingers are already being pointed at him and his past relationship
with the Rawlings government being cited to back allegations that he is not a
fully committed Danquah-Busia adherent.
Otherwise,
why would he work with Rawlings in the energy sector? At this time, some have
found it expedient to cite him, forgetting that other high-ranking members of
the NPP (including Kufuor and Konadu Apraku) had served under the Rawlings
military government.
Raking
the past now will be a good step toward dealing with the Tarzan, some opine.
And trust them to use the only means they know: insults, intimidation, and outright
bullying to cow him into submission. If those measures fail, they will move a
notch higher to ostracize him as the black sheep among them.
Eventually,
though, they will hit the snag that Wereko-Brobby is pointing them to now and throw
up their arms in despair. They will then begin to behave as if an
extra-terrestrial power has clogged their attempt to seek redress.
Trust
them to advance arguments to get away with that flight into the transcendental.
Once they decided before the elections to hide behind God to prosecute their
political agenda, they won’t cease invoking him to explain their manouevres
except to accept the fact that their defeat at the polls was an act of God.
They
haven’t conceded defeat to President Mahama even though God didn’t answer their
prayer and they know very well that they have hijacked the battle from the Lord
and are fighting it themselves, all to no avail. For all they may care to know,
the majority of Ghanaians have put the elections behind them and won’t be
bothered how they treat each other. They will, however, relish the free “Concert
Party” show.
Now
that they are fighting among themselves, they will give us more to know about
their true “Mate me ho” element. Good show, elephants. Fight on. There is no
grass to suffer, but your own selves. Fight on!!
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