Press Release
NPP
May 29, 2015
STATEMENT BY NANA
AKUFO-ADDO, NPP 2016 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, AT
A PRESS CONFERENCE ON NPP AND ADAMS MAHAMA’S
DEATH ON 29TH MAY, 2015, AT NPP PARTY
HEADQUARTERS, ACCRA
Ladies and gentlemen, a week ago, there was a
painful, horrendous and tragic death in the NPP
family. The Chairman of our party in the Upper
East region was murdered. The circumstances of
the death of Chairman Adams Mahama have shaken
our party and I daresay, our nation, to depths
not normally reached in everyday discourse. I
admit freely to having been shaken to my inner
core, and, thus, cut short my trip to Europe and
returned home the very next day. It is a tragedy
that I pray the Almighty would give us strength
to deal with and spare us from a repetition ever
again. The Adua prayers for Chairman Adams are
scheduled for June 7th in Bolgatanga, and, until
then, we remain in a state of mourning for our
fallen colleague.
Since the tragedy, there has been an outbreak of
a cacophony of voices within our party. There
have been many cries from the heart by party
loyalists and supporters and a sense of despair,
felt by many, has been demonstrated in various
ways. The regional chairmen have led the cry and
they have been followed by other important,
identifiable groups and individuals within the
party. It was to be expected that the regional
chairmen should lead the cry; after all,
Chairman Adams was one of them. It is especially
sad for our party that this tragedy should
befall us right at the time, indeed the first
time, that we have a group of regional chairmen
who have developed such a great sense of
brotherliness among themselves. It is not
surprising, therefore, that they should consider
an attack on one of them as an attack on all of
them. Hopefully, this act of infamy should bind
them even tighter together.
As I have tried to deal with my own personal
loss and heartbreak, I have been listening to
many people and taking on board the
controversies and sentiments that have been
generated. It is my responsibility as flag
bearer to listen and, then, seek to do what is
in the best interest of our party. Having heard
so many people, my first call on all party
members and supporters is to cease fire. The
finger pointing, the name calling, the insults,
the lies, the denigrating of past and current
leaders must stop. They are to be roundly
condemned. His Excellency John Agyekum Kufuor,
2nd President of the Fourth Republic, remains an
icon of our party and nation, whose legacy we in
the NPP must jealously guard. There is
absolutely nothing to be gained from internal
recriminations within the NPP except to provide
fertile soil for our opponents.
It is unseemly and disrespectful towards the
memory of Chairman Adams that such loud noises
should continue within the party, whilst we are
still in the official mourning period. A certain
amount of outburst induced by the tragedy is
understandable because of the extreme nature of
the tragedy, but that should not mean that NPP
members should behave out of character.
Now that many sections of the party have spoken
and made their appeals, the party structures
should take over and deal with the issues that
have been raised. Meetings of the National
Executive Committee, the body charged with
responsibility for directing the affairs of the
party and, then, the National Council, the
highest decision making body of the party,
except for the National Annual Delegates’
Conference, should be convened after the Adua
prayers to resolve the issues that we face. I am
confident that these bodies will act in the
collective interest of the party.
None of us in the NPP should forget for one
moment that we have an election to fight and win
in 18 months’ time and that we are in the middle
of selecting our parliamentary candidates for
that purpose; none of us should forget the
desperate state into which our nation has been
plunged; and none of us should forget that the
people of Ghana look to us to rescue our nation.
We dare not jeopardize this sacred trust by
fruitless internal strife. Chairman Adams was a
passionate party man, he wanted and fought to
make possible an NPP victory in 2016. Let us win
it in his memory.
But, perhaps, most important for us immediately
is the need for the law enforcement agencies to
bring a quick resolution to the despicable,
criminal act that took place in Bolgatanga a
week ago. We note the professionalism so far
displayed by them in their investigations. We
expect them to continue to do so and not to be
influenced in any way by political pressure of
any sort. I acknowledge and appreciate the
sentiments expressed by the President of the
Republic with the promise that justice will be
done to Chairman Adams and we intend to hold him
to that promise. It is unfortunate, but true,
that criminal activities with political
undertones in this country have tended not to be
resolved satisfactorily. The latest example of
this is the shooting and killing of the Nkwanta
South DCE some six months ago. It does not
engender public confidence that, up to today,
there has been no word on the investigations
into that crime. We shall not be satisfied with
anything less than the arrest and successful
prosecution of the killers of Chairman Adams.
There should be no ifs and buts.
Whilst we continue with the period of mourning
for Chairman Adams and until the party’s
governing bodies meet, I ask that we normalize
things within our party. This means, for
instance, that the officers of the party, the
National Chairman and the General Secretary in
particular, must have access to their offices at
party headquarters and not be hindered in any
way from being able to conduct their duties. The
NPP way of doing things is to be guided by law
and order and I ask that normalcy return to our
headquarters and party offices. I ask that we
extend mutual respect to each other and we
listen to each other.
I will not tolerate chaos within our party. The
recriminations against ourselves in this period
of healing, I repeat, must stop. On the
contrary, we should all embrace the laudable
initiative of the National Women’s Organiser who
is launching, as from this Sunday here at the
party headquarters, a week of fasting and
prayers for the welfare of the NPP. I have no
doubt that, with the help of Almighty God and by
our collective determination, the storms that
are currently buffeting the great, historic
movement that the NPP represents will soon
subside so that it can fulfil its mission of
developing our nation in freedom.
The NPP is not the first party to face crisis
and the NPP will not be the last party to come
out of its crisis stronger. I want to assure
you. I am confident of our capacity to overcome
and we shall overcome.
Finally, I want to reassure all our members,
supporters and the country at large that I
remain focused on the main project of winning
the election of 2016 and forming an NPP
administration that will restore hope to our
nation. We owe that to the long line of martyrs
for freedom and justice in Ghana, and to the
millions and millions of hardworking Ghanaians
who have seen their efforts destroyed in a
difficult, declining economy. This nation
deserves a competent, compassionate and honest
government and we in the NPP have to provide it
so that Ghana can go back to a bright future of
progress and prosperity. We have no choice.
Come, then, patriots of the NPP, let us stand
together, shoulder to shoulder, in the cause of
the NPP and make it happen for mother Ghana.
Let me end with a word from Holy Scripture and
pardon me that I take the liberty of amending it
slightly to make my point. Psalm 122, verses
6-8. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem: Pray for
the peace of the NPP, Pray for the peace of
Ghana, May they prosper who love you. Peace be
within our walls, Peace be within our homes and
offices. Prosperity within our country and our
communities. For the sake of my brethren and
companions, for the sake of my colleagues in the
NPP and in our country, I will now say, Peace be
within us.
God bless the NPP! God bless Ghana! God bless
Africa!
Thank you.
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