Press Release
NPP
January 9, 2013
PRESS CONFERENCE ADDRESSED BY THE CHAIRMAN
OF THE NEW PATRTIOTIC PARTY, JAKE OBETSEBI LAMPTEY, ON THE 9TH
OF JANUARY 2012
AT PARTY HEADQUARTERS, ACCRA
We welcome you, ladies and gentlemen of the press, to our
maiden press encounter in 2013. We wish you all a blessed and
prosperous 2013 and hope that this New Year will see an even
better partnership between us in helping to deepen our
democracy.
Today, we’d like to provide you with an update on NPP’s recent
activities in pursuit of justice and the status of the
petition brought before the Supreme Court of Ghana by three
distinguished members of our party.
We undertake this battle of justice – not merely for the more
than 5 million people who voted for our party, and certainly
not for the glory of our Presidential candidate – but on
behalf of all Ghanaians, including those yet unborn, and
indeed Africans from across the continent who are watching our
case and looking to Ghana to pave the way forward. Our nation
has always been at the forefront of democratic change and
political progress, and we are confident that the wisdom and
foresight of our justices will make our beacon of democracy
shine even brighter.
It is very important that everyone understand that the
election, the inauguration, and the Supreme Court case are
linked together by our Constitution. And so long as we follow
the letter of the law in our Constitution, these 3 events
cannot be separated. They are linked together by the rule of
law.
The 1992 Constitution, in its wisdom, fully envisioned the
possibility of a disputed election. It foresaw a circumstance
where those in power and desperate to hang on to it would
conspire to violate the sovereign will of the Ghanaian people.
As such, the Constitution allows a provision to challenge that
fraud in the Supreme Court of Ghana. Article 64 states that a
challenge petition must be filed within 21 days of the
electoral result being officially announced, and of course
that is what we did at the end of last month. The next steps
in the Constitutional process are the replies of the
respondents; namely the EC and John Mahama, who was the
beneficiary of the malpractices. The EC reply was entered on
Monday afternoon and made public yesterday, and I shall
discuss it shortly. We await the reply of the President today
so that the Supreme Court can get down to business and begin
hearing testimony and evaluating evidence.
The framers of the 1992 Constitution fully envisioned a
President being declared the winner of an election, a
challenge being entered 21 days later, and just a week after
that, the inauguration taking place on the basis of the
original declaration. Thus, the court case to determine the
validity of the challenge, and therefore of the inauguration
itself, takes place – in the evaluating of evidence, calling
of witnesses, and deliberations of the justices – after the
inauguration has taken place and the President sets about the
business of state. However – and this is the most important
point that all Ghanaians and in fact the world over must
remember at all times – the inauguration is NOT a point of no
return.
The specific language states: “A declaration by the Supreme
Court that the election of the President is not valid shall be
without prejudice to anything done by the President before the
declaration. What this means is that the Court can declare, as
we are confident that they will do in the interest of justice
shortly, that the election of December 7 and 8, when corrected
for invalid and fraudulent votes, actually resulted in the
victory of Nana Akufo-Addo. Therefore John Mahama must vacate
the Castle and a new inauguration of the proper President must
take place immediately. Once in office, President Akufo-Addo
will respect whatever laws may have been enacted by his
predecessor, no matter how short the duration of the
invalidated mandate.
The Ghanaian people expect this constitutional transition to
the validly elected president to be smooth, unencumbered and
peaceful.
The Supreme Court is the final arbiter of all electoral
disputes. And, thanks to the Almighty, they will be able to
deliberate in a national environment of peace without any
threat of violence whatsoever. Indeed, the many frustrated
voters who feel that their sovereign will has been violated
have been patient, because they are expecting justice to be
done by the Supreme Court.
Essentially, there are 5 main categories that invalidate
votes, all of which are drawn from the pink sheets. We have
over 24,000 of them, on which we have conducted a painstaking
analysis. The 5 categories are:
1. Over voting
2. Voting w/o verification
3. Lack of EC signature
4. “Ghost” polling stations
5. Mismatching words and numbers
We contend that when all of these 5 categories are combined,
over 1 million 342 thousand votes will be invalidated. That is
a monstrous sum! Imagine: 1 in every 8 votes declared by the
EC were invalid.
Consider that only 300,000 votes separated the 2 candidates in
the EC announcement, yet that sum, plus 1,000,000 more, will
be invalidated. That is the astonishing and devastating
evidence on the pink sheets.
Consider that only 150,000 invalid Mahama votes are required
to push him below 50% and therefore force a runoff, yet nearly
6 times that amount have been identified as invalid Mahama
votes.
Consider that only 520,000 invalid Mahama votes are required
to give Nana Akufo-Addo a 1-touch victory outright, yet nearly
double that amount have been identified.
I want all Ghanaians to remember the following numbers: 2, 4,
6, 8, 12, 127.
Let me tell you why they are important:
• 2 – for the over 200,000 invalid votes as a result of no EC
signature on the pink sheet
• 4 – for the over 400,000 invalid votes cast without
verification
• 6 – for the over 600,000 invalid votes cast due to over
voting – more votes were recorded than ballots were
distributed in a polling station
• 8 – 1 in every 8 votes that the EC declared will have to be
invalidated
• 12 – 12% of the votes were invalid!
• 127 – 127,000 voters that the EC says are a “mistake”
Of course, we have based our case on this solid evidence of
arithmetic and we will stick to the evidence.
So, how did the EC respond to that evidence? What did they
have to say about our numbers: 2, 4, 6, 8, 12, 127?
Well, they had nothing to say about the details of the case.
They spend more time and energy debating vocabulary by quoting
definitions of adjectives from dictionaries than they spent
defending to the Ghanaian people why, despite being funded by
the taxpayers to the tune of hundreds of millions of cedis,
they ran an election in which 1 in every 8 votes will have to
be thrown out. Their document was full of arrogance and
irreverence, and offered no justification for the flaws, other
than pathetic excuses about signatures not passing through 3
sheets of carbon paper and suggesting that there were nearly a
¼ million voters added to the rolls late because they were
foreign service or NGO officials, students abroad on
government scholarships, or international peacekeepers.
The EC certainly did not explain why they chose to annul the
results of certain polling stations with minor violations of
verification or overvoting, yet over 1.3 million were declared
valid without any problem.
We look forward to facing the EC in court, backed by 24,000 of
their very own pink sheets.
Elections, we insist, are about those who cast the votes and
not those who count, record or declare. This case is necessary
for renewing public confidence in our elections, hence, our
democracy. We have presented before the court what we believe
to be incontrovertible evidence that John Mahama did not win
the 2012 presidential election and rather that Nana Akufo-Addo
won.
We will prove, just from documented evidence from the EC
itself, that over 12% (1.34 million) of votes counted were in
fact illegal and ought not have been included in the declared
total, and that over 2/3 of this sum, numbering some 916,000,
wrongly went to John Mahama for an election in which he
crossed the mandatory 50% mark by less than 154,000.
We have noticed that the NDC has spent the last few days since
we filed our petition attacking not the substance of evidence
we have presented in court, but raising by-the-way issues
citing the irregularities present in every election. Granted
there are minor irregularities in every election what the
people of Ghana are saying, by supporting our petition is
that, a manipulated total in which 1 in every 8 votes should
not have been included cannot be whitewashed with the term
“irregularity” and implied to have been simple, isolated,
innocent errors. The EC cannot substitute your vote, our
votes, with that of an illegal voter called “irregularity”. We
don't accept that and cannot accept that.
Elections in Ghana must not be determined by who has the
capacity to rig or buy the vote with connivance from some
corrupted elements within the body tasked to supervise a clean
and fair process. We hope that at the end of this case the
Supreme Court will give a ruling that will not only declare
Nana Akufo-Addo the rightful winner but will also set in place
a process that will lead to reforming the electoral process
and secure the fate of our democracy forever.
The evidence is on our side and we believe that when
considered by the justices of the Supreme Court, it will be so
pronounced.
In conclusion, I would like to state once again that this is
not about Nana Akufo-Addo and his Presidential aspiration;
it's about our country and its future generations. On behalf
of them, we trust the court to do what’s right and we will
remain patient and peaceful in anticipation of that justice.
Choosing to petition the Supreme Court in line with our
Constitution’s provisions actually reinforces the rule of law
and seeks to let justice underpin our peace. It is this path
that will bring justice to bear on any grievance. If a
grievance festers in the absence of justice, that is the
surest way to lead to a disturbance of the status quo and a
breach of the peace.
Very often on the African continent, electoral disputes have
resulted in armed conflicts and violence. The NPP, coming from
one of Africa's oldest democratic traditions, has been
committed since its inception to peace and democracy and has
chosen to rely on the rule of law and appeal for justice in
its action at the Supreme Court. The party should therefore be
commended and upheld as a shining example. This case will make
or break our democracy, and all of Africa and indeed the world
is watching us.
Soon the party leadership will embark on a national tour to
thank its supporters for their peaceful conduct and for their
patience in anticipation of justice, and for coming out in
their numbers to vote for transformation, education, health
and jobs and against corruption, incompetence, lies and
propaganda. And, Insha Allah, we are very confident that
sooner than later the true impact of their vote shall
manifest.
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