Friday,
October 3, 2014
Folks, when I said in a post a
few days ago that the suit against the NPP by two of its members protesting
against the October 18 date for the national delegates congress to choose a
flagbearer for Election 2016 would be dismissed, some NPP buffs dismissed me as
a troublemaker. Some even dared tell me that by my political coloration, I
risked losing my credibility.
Here we are now: NPP wins case to proceed
with October 18 Congress. Judge Mustapha Logoh of the Accra Fast Track High Court awarded
Ghc5000 cost against the plaintiffs. And
the reason given by is as lame as I can’t imagine: “the two (plaintiffs) should have engaged all mechanisms within the party
before heading to court for redress”. (See:
http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/artikel.php?ID=328767)
What a farce!! One expected something more
“legalistically tenable” than this sorry apology of a reason. In the first
place, there was nothing wrong with the suit because the plaintiffs sought
nothing but that the court would direct the National Council (of the NPP) to
grant more time for the congress.
The two were of the view that the October 18
date was a violation of the party’s constitution and favoured two-time
presidential candidate (William) Nana Addo Dankwa (Danquah) Akufo-Addo. There
is every justification for such a suit to be filed and pursued without
necessarily attempting to “engage all mechanisms within the party before heading
to court for redress.” The judge’s reason is porous and more politically
dictated than legally sensible.
Interestingly, Alan Kyerematen and Francis
Addai-Nimoh (two contestants for the flagbearership) have also expressed
concerns about the date and have called on the party’s leadership to reconsider
the date for the congress. The main reason given by them and the two plaintiffs
is simple: To sufficiently reach out to the 140,000 delegates to vote at the
October 18 congress would demand more time than what has been available to them
thus far, apparently because Akufo-Addo has been more visible than they can
boast of (not because they are not worthy of public attention but because they
haven’t had much exposure as aspirants for that flagbearer position.
They need more time to sell themselves to the
delegates). But those with a premeditated agenda to “crown” Akufo-Addo as the
NPP’s flagbearer (having already advanced arguments to the effect that he is
the most marketed candidate in the party, clearly after all these years of
campaigning to be Ghana’s president and losing poortoooooooooooor!!).
Those of us monitoring closely happenings in
the NPP are convinced beyond any shred of doubt that the so-called “mechanisms”
either don’t exist in the party for aggrieved persons to use in seeking redress
or that they have been “hijacked” by the potentate Akufo-Addo and his henchmen
situated in every fibre of the party who won’t give an inch to any dissenting
voice to attempt derailing their agenda by resorting to such “mechanisms”. Such
“mechanisms” constitute nothing but machinery for doing the hatchet job to
hoist the flag that Akufo-Addo has under his armpit.
Clearly, then, no one could use such
“mechanisms” to reverse the trend, apparently because the National Executive
Council or the Council of Elders (the notable power brokers in the party pulling
pulling strings) are set stiff in their pro-Akufo-Addo stance. All the internal
structures of the NPP are dominated by backers of Akufo-Addo who are hell-bent
on stifling internal opposition to hi third attempt at forcing a river to flow
upstream.
All the other internal structures are
oriented toward Akufo-Addo. Take them one-by-one for appraisal and you should
see where I want to move you. The NPP MP’s (at least 100 or them) are
pro-Akufo-Addo and won’t listen to any dissenting voice. Granted that the MP’s
are also part of the so-called “internal mechanisms”, who would get the chance
to use them for any anti-Akufop-Addo manouevre and succeed?
Then, take the Regional Chairmen of the NPP
who have vowed never to yield any ground to any dissenter. Then, consider the
Constituency executive officers of the NPP cabal who are also hell-bent on
stifling anything considered as inimical to their sacred cow’s ambitions.
What exactly does Judge Logoh consider to be
“internal mechanisms” of the NPP that are clearly defined, outlined, and
available for use by aggrieved party members? For all he may care to know, the
only “mechanism” that exists in the NPP is the Sanhedrin constituted by the
National executive Council to browbeat, drill, and grill any member who is
considered as falling foul of the tenets of this political cabal.
Consider what has happened to Dr.
Wereko-Brobbey, Dr. Kofi Apraku, Dr. Nyaho Tamakloe, and many more to know how
this “internal mechanism” operates to the dismay of genuine party members
wishing to effect change to re-position the party for a brighter electoral
future.
Don’t even bring in their intimidation of
Kwame Pianim (whom they fear to haul before the Sanhedrin because of the
negative backlash).
I am even not talking about the numskull
lummox called Kennedy Agyapong who is one of those playing the frontline role
of intimidating anti-Akufo-Addo elements in the party. Such a character won’t
win any goodwill for the NPP. And there are many of his type all over the place
(home and abroad).
There is so much to alarm the party members
who hold different opinions on internal affairs of the party. The atmosphere
doesn’t allow for a genuine practice of internal democracy. It is either one is
for Akufo-Addo or against him and be prepared to face the music. And the
threats being bandied about are enough to prove that no effort to use anything
in the party that Judge Logoh calls “internal mechanisms” will be tolerated or
supported to the end.
By this verdict, though, the judge has just
confirmed apprehensions that seeking redress in court over goings-on in the
political parties won’t be treated as part of efforts to improve internal
democracy in those parties—and by extension—the one being practised at the
national level. If aggrieved party members cannot find help in the law, where
else should they go?
I am not surprised, then, that Oppong
Kyekyeku, one of the plaintiffs, has said that he will appeal against the
verdict: “Definitely, yes. Immediately I leave here, I am going to consult with
my counsel and come out and fight for appeal. I have been denied of my
membership of the party.”
What I have already qualified as a “Pyrrhic
victory” for Akufo-Addo has just been reinforced by Judge Mustapha Logoh. But
this same “Pyrrhic victory” will become the catalyst for the internal crisis
that will rock the NPP, especially if the October 18 congress adds more fuel to
the fire already burning in it. Those Akufo-Addo backers in positions of
(mis)trust in the NPP (like Freddie Blay)
who have publicly begun thumping their chests at the outcome of this
suit are simply dancing themselves lame before the actual dancing begins. Some
liberal democrats!
I shall return…
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E-mail:
mjbokor@yahoo.com
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