Akufo-Addo’s “All-Die-Be-Die”
in force at Asawase
By Dr. Michael J.K. Bokor
Friday, November 6, 2015
The latest development at the NPP
front is that “The ongoing rancor in the main
opposition New Patriotic Party has resulted in the
death of one in Asawase, a suburb of Kumasi in the
Ashanti region. Abubakr Mohammed, 30, who owes
allegiance to the current acting chair of the
troubled opposition party Freddie Blay was stabbed
several times in a confrontation with supporters of
the suspended national chairman Paul Afoko Friday”.
(See
http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/NPP-crisis-Blay-supporter-killed-in-Asawase-392447).
Folks, we are beginning to see unpleasant scenes
develop in the NPP, which is the direct upshot of
the Pyrrhic victory won by Akufo-Addo against his
alleged internal detractors, particularly Paul Afoko.
Any move to oust Kwabena Agyepong will add more to
the equation to destabilize the NPP front, even
though Akufo-Addo and his gang are relishing their
success over their so-called internal foes.
Such a Pyrrhic victory won’t pave the way for him to
have a smooth electioneering campaign season to
accomplish his childhood ambition of becoming
Ghana’s President “at all costs”. It will only lead
to his political death. And from what has begun
unfolding, I can predict convincingly that he is
washing himself out of contention.
We have already seen the first two disturbing
moments that herald the disaster awaiting Akufo-Addo.
If his own party members are rising up against the
action taken against Afoko is anything to go by,
then, we can only foretell more trouble for the NPP.
Those of us persistently writing about happenings in
the NPP know what we are about. We will be
vindicated sooner than later that Akufo-Addo is a
threat to his own political front. As he bulldozes
his way through, orchestrating at each juncture how
to dispose of his internal critics, he is sowing
seeds of discord that are all of a sudden bearing
ugly fruit.
Two such ugly products are the demonstration at the
national headquarters of the NPP by pro-Afoko
elements (that the NPP leaders dismissed as futile
agitations by NDC followers to create a bad name for
the party. We have long since known that those
demonstrators are NPP members) and the physical
confrontation between pro-Afoko supporters in the
Asawase constituency, Kumasi, leading to the death
of a supporter of Freddie Blay. I expect the Asawase
incident to be replicated in other parts of the
country. It is not over there yet, though. More will
follow to prove to Akufo-Addo and his group that
there is more than meets their eyes.
The parallels are clear at this stage. Those
supporting the removal of Afoko won’t change their
stance and those against it will not change either.
By congratulating his supporters on their action at
the NPP’s national headquarters, Afoko is set to
take the rumpus to a higher level.
The clouds of dissension gathering over the stern
action taken against Afoko have begun bursting into
torrential rains that will intensify in due course.
It is unstoppable, which must scare the Akufo-Addo
camp. But what can it do now to either avert the
deluge or to contain it? Nothing really.
First, if the pressure intensifies to force the
anti-Afoko leaders of the party to reinstate him, it
will deepen all the more the internal crisis.
Reinstating Afoko will seriously undermine the
integrity of the various party structures and
personalities spearheading the neutralization of
Afoko. How will they turn round to swallow back
their own vomit after spewing out so much dirt about
Afoko? How will they justify the about-turn? And how
will a reinstated Afoko co-exist in the party with
the very bigwigs who have undermined him all this
while? Certainly, oil and water cannot mix.
Impossible.
Second, if the anti-Afoko elements dig in and he
remains suspended, the agitations by his supporters
will intensify and develop into ugly scenes of the
kind that we are beginning to see. The Afoko lovers
will definitely go beyond mere street demonstrations
to take more serious actions such as destroying the
NPP’s property (including office buildings and
resources therein) or physically attacking those
they see as working against their idol. Reprisal
attacks will ensue and give national security much
headache.
Third, some areas heavily behind Afoko will become
“no-go” zones for the NPP’s campaign teams, which
will clip their wings. It is possible for the Afoko
lovers to do more than that, though.
Fourth, targeted attacks on the main architects of
Afoko’s downfall cannot be ruled out. In a party
known for negative tactics such as bomb-throwing and
physical attacks on dissenters, I won’t be surprised
if something worse than “acid-bathing” becomes a
political tool for use within the NPP itself.
Fifth, the Afoko lovers will either defect from the
NPP or remain in it to cause disaffection for it.
More than that, they are likely to punish Akufo-Addo
at the polls by either being apathetic (that is, not
voting at all) or by voting against him. A huge
possibility here!!
Folks, there are many other lines of action to be
taken against Akufo-Addo and his gang. If the
supporters of Afoko decide to intensify their
agitations, the situation in the NPP will worsen.
They have indicated that they are not prepared for
anything other than Afoko’s reinstatement.
Considering the Asawase fracas, let me say that it
is instructive because it is the first of such open
confrontations—and it has happened in Kumasi, the
nerve-centre of the NPP. Don’t tell me that those
involved are Northerners. Once such a physical
confrontation has erupted in the NPP’s stronghold,
it says a lot. It cannot be ruled out that the
clouds will thicken and burst into long-drawn-out
deluge to damage the NPP thereabouts.
I have said it several times that it is one thing
for those who matter in the NPP (whether as
Constituency Chairmen, Regional Chairmen, or members
of the various organs of the party) to orchestrate
against Afoko and Agyepong and use undue influence
to undermine them and another thing ensuring that
their machinations are supported across-the-board by
the party’s supporters.
Clearly, the machinations against Afoko (and
Agyepong, who has been spared for now) emanated from
the top, not the grassroots. Influencing elected
party officials at the constituency and regional
levels to rubber-stamp such machinations doesn’t
mean that the ordinary party supporters support them
as such. What we’ve begun seeing is a clear
demonstration of that feeling.
Afoko and Agyepong were elected by the party’s
delegates, but the actions taken against Afoko had
nothing to do with the opinion or feelings of those
delegates. Imposing sanctions on him won’t please
those who still love him as their National Chair.
That is why the agitation for his reinstatement will
intensify. As we see the signs of an implosion in
the NPP, we will comment on them, whether the
party’s followers who hate our comments insult us or
not. Ours is a yeoman’s job only so those who have
eyes can see what we see and save themselves from
the imminent political doom.
What else can the NPP leaders do to douse the fire?
Dismiss Afoko from the party to cut everything
short? Huh!!!!
I shall return…
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