Tuesday,
January 1, 2013
We have had good cause to posit
arguments that the NPP’s lawsuit at the Supreme Court won’t be determined
solely on the figures and documents that are contained in the petition filed by
the party’s National Chairman, Jake Otanka Obetsebi-Lamptey, last Friday. That
is why we have cautioned the party’s followers not to be optimistic of victory.
We have also drawn attention to
the fact that the NPP has the onerous burden to prove its allegations and that
doing so will call for more than what the so-called documentary evidence
entails.
More importantly, we have argued
that by attaching President Mahama to the lawsuit, the NPP leaders have
complicated matters for themselves because they will be required to go to a
great length in establishing, proving, and confirming beyond all reasonable
doubts that he was complicit in the electoral malpractices that they are
complaining about.
We made these arguments even at
the time that we hadn’t read in full the NPP’s petition. Now, we have laid
hands on it and read it in its entirety to know its entailments. We cringe at
what we have discovered and will insist that the petitioners have hidden
motives for framing the petition the way it is and for its obvious inherent
inadequacies that we have identified at several levels in that petition.
Even before we get down to the
nitty-gritty, we want to say upfront that the petition is fraught with bad
English, gross inconsistencies and inaccuracies, not to mention contradictions
and factual misrepresentations. We know the Supreme Court will not miss those
shortcomings as well.
We note that these inherent
inadequacies don’t make the NPP’s case convincing. Rather, they raise
disturbing questions on the integrity and credibility of the petitioners,
especially for the defeated Akufo-Addo (whose construction as a “legal luminary”
is at stake) and Mahamudu Bawumia (whose worth as an “astute economist” is
undermined by the intricate fallacies, illogical reasoning, and outright arithmetically
challenged instances in this petition).
We note again that the inherent
inadequacies of this petition cast a huge cloud of doubt over the honesty and public
image of the petitioners. We need not go any further. Evidence from the
petition itself speaks volumes to substantiate our stance.
Granted that the substance of the
petition is “figures” and nothing but “figures,” we will isolate some of the
data in the petition as the basis for questioning the credibility of the
petitioners and the legal team, not to mention the mass of party activists
bamboozled into timidly buying into the rhetoric of their leaders to see the
petition as the “solid documentary evidence” that will win them the day at the
Supreme Court.
I will isolate only two of those
factual errors for now to explain the problems that the petitioners have added
to what has already hamstrung their efforts to save face.
Point 16: “That I further say
that the total number of registered voters that 2nd Respondent
furnished petitioners’ party, the NPP, was fourteen million and thirty-one
thousand, six hundred and eighty (14,031,680). Subsequently it came to the notice
of the Petitioners that 2nd Respondent had on Sunday 9th
December 2012 declared the total number registered voters as fourteen million
and one fifty-eight thousand eight hundred and ninety (14,158,890). Furthermore
on the same date the 2nd Respondent posted on its website the total
number of registered voters as fourteen million and thirty one million seven
hundred and ninety-three (14,031,793).”
Now, let’s take a second, good
look at the figure: “the total number of
registered voters as fourteen million and
thirty one million seven hundred and ninety-three (14 million and 31 million, 793). What sort of computation is this?
Don’t tell me it is a
typographical error because it is not. I consider it as part of the lies that
the NPP leaders have piled on lies to arrive at this one grand lie!!
Credibility matters a lot in cases of this sort.
The problem with this error is
that it has to do with a fact, which is what will attract the Supreme Court’s
attention. In legal matters of this sort, once factual errors appear in claims
made by a litigant, it creates very serious credibility problems. Who will believe
such a lying person?
Then, let’s move down to another
serious problem in the computation and presentation of data by the petitioners.
According to the NPP’s petition, the total votes declared as cast in favour of
the contesting presidential candidates is as follows:
Candidate
|
Number
of votes
|
Percentage
|
John D. Mahama
(NDC)
|
5,574,761
|
50.70%
|
Dr. Henry Herbert
Lartey (GCPP)
|
38,223
|
0.35%
|
Nana Ado Dankwa
Akufo-Addo (NPP)
|
5,248,898
|
47.74%
|
Dr. Papa Kwesi
Nduom (PPP)
|
64,362
|
0.59%
|
Akwasi Addai
Odike (UFP)
|
8,877
|
0.08%
|
Hassan Ayariga
(PNC)
|
24,617
|
0,22%
|
Dr. Michael Abu
Saka Forster (CPP)
|
20,323
|
0.18%
|
Jacob Osei Yeboah
(Independent)
|
15,201
|
0.14%
|
TOTAL ELIGIBLE VOTES
CAST
|
14,158,880
|
Now, dear reader, another factual error here as stated in the NPP’s petition. Add up these figures and you will get 10,995,262, which is exactly what the Electoral Commission posted on its Web site, not this 14,158,880 that the NPP stated in its petition. This case of “arithmetical challenge” creates another credibility problem. Unless the NPP petitioners can go back to amend this error and present a new petition solving this problem, the big question mark on their credibility hangs. And it will mean a lot to the court.
There are many other
aspects of this petition that don’t redound to the image and substance of this
lawsuit. We shall pick them apart to prove that the NPP leaders are either
deliberately twisting matters to lose the case and use it as an exit strategy
or to confirm doubts that they are really not as astute and “luminary” as they
have been upheld all along by their followers.
I haven’t seen any of
them as such. To me, they are only cunning politicians who know how to hide
behind legal technicalities to prolong a battle that they lost long before their
sad fate was confirmed and sealed at the general elections. Yet, they are
adamantly unconvinced that they lost genuine elections.
It was clear to me,
even before the polls, that they were not in the good books of the electorate;
but buoyed up by their own self-importance and the sycophancy of their
followers, they failed to read the writing on the wall. Thus, they entered the
elections, so confident of victory that they didn’t put together any Plan “B”
to contain the defeat and its aftershock(s).
Now that reality has
sunk in, they can’t easily account for that sound defeat and are using all
technicalities, subterfuge, and vain appeals to conscience to fade away from
the limelight.
From what I have
gathered so far, I am persuaded that not only is their petition factually
deficient but they also will find it really tough proving that President Mahama
played any direct role in the allegations that they have raised in their
petition.
That being the case,
I can’t wait any longer to see how the Supreme Court will tackle this case. I
am quick to see it as nothing but a bundle of exit strategies adroitly crafted
to blindfold the angry NPP supporters and apologists. These NPP leaders are
seeking refuge in these technicalities and have deliberately doctored figures
to suit their agenda. They know that by so doing, the court will raise serious
doubts about their credibility, which will reflect negatively on the case.
Having watered down
the force of their petition with these factual errors, inconsistencies, and
contradictions—not to talk about the porous language in which the petition is
even couched—they can now sit back, fingers crossed to hope against hope.
If it so happens that
they lose the case as a matter of course, why should any supporter blame them?
After all, they have a good defence in place already, which is that the matter
is beyond their control. It is the Supreme Court that is to be blamed for the “unexpected”
outcome. A clever exit strategy to avoid being eaten alive by their angry
supporters!
Indeed, if this
petition is what the NPP considers as an abracadabra to its electoral woes,
then, more trouble awaits its members. The Supreme Court will need a more
cogent presentation than such a weak and factually deficient petition to tilt
the case in the NPP’s favour.
As the situation
stands now, the Court will not even bother to consider the main substance of
the petition, which is to declare Akufo-Addo as the winner of the Presidential
elections. If in stating the core elements of the lawsuit the NPP can be so
deficient in facts, how can it expect the Supreme Court to believe its version
of the story behind the 2012 general elections?
Certainly, the real
wailing and gnashing of teeth awaits them at the end of this long-drawn-out “Concert
Party” show.
I shall
return…
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E-mail:
mjbokor@yahoo.com
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hmm,bundle of exit strategies.
ReplyDeleteha....your analysis sound so good to be true,
ReplyDeletebut my problem is you forgot to add that these errors can be corrected in the court of law before proceedings. Because clearly u can see those are typo mistakes due to the fact that most of the figures are familiar with the larger population.
So the important issue is if these are corrected, can they win their case??
Thanks, Nunn Clus. Good question. Correcting those errors may be good to a point. After all, the rush with which they did things suggested there might not be a problem-free document to be laid before the Supreme Court.
ReplyDeleteHowever, as I have all along insisted in my analysis of the lawsuit, the Court will not necessarily base its opinions on the contents of the NPP's petition or the so-called "documentary evidence" in its hands. It will definitely broaden the scope to include several other issues pertaining to the electoral process itself.
Its deliberate cos if the NPP puts the correct sum of 10,995,262, how can they make a case in court? Their aim is to make a case of over-voting and as such they had to write 14,158,880 instead of the correct figure of 10,995,262 (which is obviously less than the number of registered voters be it 14,031,793 or the 14,158,880) whilst fasting and praying to God to prevent the court or anyone else from detecting the folly. Otherwise how can anyone be convinced that their Excels and powerful laptops they paraded in Nana Addo's garden to show to the World that they were seriously at work, could not add up simple figures?
ReplyDeleteI am very much surprise about the NPP for not conceding defeat because they themselves were aware of the defeat before even 7th December, 2012. How can you go and campaign in the Northern Region and still promise them free SHS, meanwhile you've said they are enjoying it already. What a shame!
ReplyDelete