Has President Mahama really abandoned the Volta
Region? By Dr. Michael J.K. Bokor Sunday,
May 22, 2016
Folks, I have already expressed my opinions
on whether the Volta Region will remain as the
NPP’s nemesis at Election 2016. I have done so,
guided by history, precedent, and a good sense
of what has been happening in our Ghanaian
political situation over the years. In politics,
tradition counts.
Not to be glossed over also is the stated
opinion of the NPP Establishment that has
created the impression that the people of the
Volta Region are averse to the NPP, which
explains why much stake is being put into the
electioneering campaign to change that trend at
Election 2016. That explains why Akufo-Addo is
telling the people of the Volta Region that he
wants to build a new relationship with them and
that he will not discriminate against them if
elected President. He needs their support for
that matter.
Akufo-Addo’s four-day tour of the Volta
Region and matters arising have exposed certain
grave issues on that score to consider. That
tour has so far taken him to Southern Volta
Region, particularly, Anloga (Anlo
constituency), Aflao (Ketu South constituency),
and Mafi-Adidome (representing Tongu South and
Central constituencies). These are the
constituencies which have always voted massively
against the NPP.
News reports of Akufo-Addo’s interactions
there provide enough food for thought, which I
will position myself to raise and digest in this
opinion piece with the view to casting light on
hidden truths, conjectures, and apprehensions
that are crucial to the political discourse on
the place and role of the Volta Region in
shaping the fate of the NDC and NPP at Election
2016.
The other political parties are a complete
washout that need no mention in this rhetorical
setup. At best, they are mere fodder for the NPP
and NDC. They could do better by collapsing
themselves into these main parties. For
instance, Dr. Nduom and his Progressive People’s
Party are fit for the NPP while the other
mushroom parties (PNC, Ghana Consolidated
Popular Party, Hassan Ayariga’s APC, and all
others claiming the Nkrumahist bent) are fit for
the NDC.
The others claiming to be operating as
political parties with no office anywhere in
Ghana are fit for nothing but abolition, which
the EC should muster up enough courage to do.
Madam Akua Donkor’s Ghana Freedom Party has
already identified with the NDC and must be
advised to fall in step appropriately. Others
led by Odike and Co. are mere irritants to be
squashed out of existence if they can’t reason
properly to know where to belong). Too many
political parties of their kind only end up
spoiling the broth.
In any case, sentiments expressed by the
chiefs and opinion leaders in their interaction
with Akufo-Addo need expatiation. News reports
bluntly stated that the chiefs and people
expressed grave concerns (or disappoint) that
although the Volta Region has sustained the NDC
in power, it has been neglected. The
implications are far-reaching, especially if we
place them in the context of Election 2016. The
most obvious one is that the Volta Region won’t
go for the NDC again.
Let’s weigh some of the reported utterances
of the spokespersons for the people in the areas
toured by Akufo-Addo. At Ashaiman, leaders of
the Ewe Community accused President Mahama of
abandoning the Volta Region, creating the
impression that they would shift toward the NPP
but needed firm assurances from Akufo-Addo that
he would deal properly with the Volta Region.
Others came from elsewhere:
MAFI ADIDOME “Togbui Atatim IV, Chief of
the Mafi Traditional Area in the Volta Region
has condemned the ruling National Democratic
Congress (NDC) for abandoning developmental
projects in the area started by the opposition
New Patriotic Party (NPP) when the party was in
power. According to him, the unfortunate action
by the NDC government which has got massive
support from the Volta Region has stalled
development in the area.
Speaking on
behalf of Chiefs of South and Central Tongu, in
a meeting with Nana Akufo-Addo, in Adidome, over
the weekend, Togbe Atatim IV was speaking on
cited some projects which has not seen
continuation under the NDC government.
“In Central Tongu, the construction work on a
Police Head Quarters in Adidome which was
started by the NPP government but has been put
to a halt by the current NDC government. Work on
the fence wall for the Teraferi Dam was expected
to be continued by the NDC government after a
plan had been drawn and started by the NPP
government on this project but nothing has been
done since. In fact there are numerous other
such projects in both South and North Tongu that
will be mentioned at the appropriate time. We
know that you Nana, you are capable of rising to
the occasion and will not disappoint us.” (See
http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/Volta-Chief-condemns-NDC-for-abandoning-projects-started-by-NPP-440836).
AFLAO
The Paramount Chief of the
Aflao Traditional Area, Togbe Amenya Fiti V, has
refuted claims making the rounds that he, in
2013, promised to deliver 100,000 votes to
President John Mahama in the 2016 elections.
According to him, those reports are false, and
his statement made on the day have been
deliberately twisted by some media houses to put
him in bad light.
He said a lot more to
create the impression that he personally
benefited from Akufo-Addo and Alan Kyerematen’s
interventions when they were part of the Kufuor
government. (See
http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/I-never-promised-Mahama-100k-votes-Togbui-Fiti-V-440817)
PRESIDENT MAHAMA’S DURBAR WITH ANLO CHIEFS
AND OPINION LEADERS
At that durbar at
Anloga, the chiefs and people of Southern Volta
Region expressed grave concern about hardships
and lack of support for initiatives to develop
the Volta Region. President Mahama made
assurances to reverse the trend.
SOME
GRAY AREAS
Why didn’t Togbe Fiti refute
those publications at the time but would do so
now and turn round to retrace his connections
with Akufo-Addo and Kyerematen? (Togbe Fiti was
cited for fraud and was to be prosecuted but set
free because of our deplorable justice delivery
system. Much still exists to incriminate him
over the Diamond Cement issue).
What has
become of the water project that President
Mahama and Faure Gnasingbe of Togo jointly
announced to commence in the Southern Volta
Region, water being tapped from the Ada estuary
for that purpose?
Has the NDC administration really abandoned
the Volta Region? How? What exactly does the
Volta Region need that the government has failed
to provide so far to warrant the complaints and
threats to shift political allegiance (as if one
should expect a herd mentality in the electoral
decisions that people make in that part of
Ghana?).
What have the various local authorities been
doing such that they cannot connect with the
people to solve problems? And why should the
matter degenerate to the point that these chiefs
and spokespersons are holding President Mahama
to ransom as they express favourable interests
in Akufo-Addo? Are they to be trusted, though?
Why is the impression of a herd mentality being
created by these chiefs and opinion leaders as
if the voters in the Volta Region aren’t free to
make their own electoral decisions? Of
course, they are individuals with opinions and
votes that they cannot force others to accept.
Their agitations may not fetch anything
politically useful for Akufo-Addo, given the
fact that in the polling booth, they won’t be
there to dictate to the voter how to vote. So,
the arm-twisting manouevres emerging now may not
cut butter. That’s what Akufo-Addo has to be
wary of. If he buys easily into what is
happening now, he will end up more disappointed
than ever on election day. What happens when
someone manages to please these seemingly
disgruntled chiefs and spokespersons to eat back
their vomit on the quiet? In politics, anything
can happen.
It is still too early in the electioneering
campaign period for utterances of this sort to
be stamped as a fait accompli to determine the
fate of the incumbent or those challenging him.
A lot more is happening on the quiet that may
not easily come to notice but which will
determine the outcome of Election 2016. That is
why it is advisable for one to be circumspect
before jumping to any conclusion on the basis of
the sentiments being expressed.
In our part of the world, politics is very
much influenced by on-the-spur-of-the-moment
considerations, even if we appreciate the fact
that certain electoral decisions made over the
years appear to have given us a pattern of “for
or against” as regards the fate of the
politicians and their political traditions. That
pattern explains why the Volta Region is easily
established as the stronghold of the NDC and the
Ashanti and Eastern Regions as those for the
NPP. Indeed, swing regions hold more for these
parties than their strongholds do. So, what is
the big bluff about strongholds worth? Only for
purposes of reinforcing bragging rights? And
what are the benefits of those bragging rights?
Just to feed into the negative politics of
ethnicity or whatever!!
I wait to hear what these very chiefs and
opinion leaders will say if President Mahama
happens to visit their domains on his campaign
tours. For now, we wonder whether the government
isn’t being Blackmailed or held to ransom by
these disgruntled chiefs and opinion leaders.
How the government wriggles itself out of the
tight corner should open us new windows through
which to see things as efforts continue to be
made to improve governance. Indeed, doing so
goes beyond mere political rhetoric and
assurances of redemption. The people’s ears are
stopped to such high-sounding promises. Folks,
the stage is set for more of such somersaulting
sessions, especially as the main electioneering
campaign starts.
I shall return… • E-mail:
mjbokor@yahoo.com • Join me on Facebook at:
http://www.facebook.com/mjkbokor to continue the
conversation.
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