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NEW PATRIOTIC PARTY
PRESS RELEASE,
NPP
Tuesday, December
23rd, 2010.
TRUTH IN OUR
POLITICS
Trust is a very important ingredient in our politics and
society and the basis of trust is truth. For our democracy
to work, people must believe our politicians. For our
society to work, people must believe that our leaders speak
the truth.
Unfortunately, since the return of the NDC to government,
there has been a deliberate, systemic and sustained campaign
to mislead Ghanaians about crucial issues. Indeed, this
campaign of lies was central to the NDC’s 2008 campaign.
During the campaign, they lied gleefully about issues and
their opponents. Innocent people were accused of crimes they
had never committed and the NPP was portrayed falsely as a
corrupt and uncaring party. During their testimony before
the Appointments committee of Parliament in early 2009,
nominee after nominee stepped up to admit to the committee
that they had lied deliberately about people and policies
during the campaign and that the lies were “just platform
talk.” Unfortunately, the platform talk has been carried
into government with members of the government failing
repeatedly to meet the basic standards of honesty in
communicating with Ghanaians.
The list of the NDC lies is endless.
They admit to the World Bank and IMF that they inherited a
good economy while telling Ghanaians that they inherited a
bankrupt economy. The icing on the cake was President Mills’
claim, made at Bolga that nothing was achieved under the
Kufuor regime.
Honourable Okudzeto Ablakwa claimed the government has
created over a million jobs when there is no iota of
evidence to support that and was contradicted by Hon. E.T.
Mensah in Parliament with no sanction for Ablakwa’s blatant
lie.
The President denies ever promising to put money in people’s
pockets. He should examine his campaign promises. Many of
his words are still available on tape.
The President warns against smuggling even while his Vice
pulls strings to get Amanjaro, a British company that has
been banned for smuggling cocoa, a reprieve from a just ban
imposed by the Cocoa Marketing Board. In this sordid affair,
there are questions about both substance and process. Even
if the Vice-President received no financial benefit for his
interference for the reversal of the ban, what was the
justification for his interference? Why would other
potential smugglers be deterred when they know that despite
the warnings by the President, they can obtain a reprieve
with the right contacts?
The government feigns indignation about the sale of state
lands to members of the public, including NPP members when
many of their members retain title to lands they acquired
while in government. If there is something wrong with the
acquisition of land under the NPP government why is it not
equally wrong to acquire land under the NDC?
They make claims about inflation that are patently
misleading. Even while the prices of basic foods, services
and tolls rise, the government congratulates itself on
stabilizing the economy.
They make claims about implementation of single-spine that
are untrue. Indeed, by the time all is said and done,
instead of single-spine, we may see double and triple-spine
salary structures implemented.
They claimed there were no problems with this year’s Hajj
when there were problems. Despite the premature
self-congratulations, indeed some of our Muslim brethren
were unable to make the pilgrimage to Mecca.
They assured parents that Senior Secondary schools were
ready for their wards when the schools were not. As I write,
many parents and children are in distress about admissions
that cannot be effected because of inadequate facilities.
While the lies of the government are bad, it is worsened by
a tendency to find scapegoats for their failures. For
instance, despite clear evidence that Ghanaians are worried
about security in our homes and on our roads, the
government, with the President leading, claims loudly that
enemies of the government are concocting stories to spread
fear and panic amongst Ghanaians.
This NDC strategy of saying everything to be elected and
then saying anything to stay in power is undermining not
just our politics but our society.
It is tarnishing the image all politicians, regardless of
our party affiliations and that is unfortunate.
It is time for politicians, including the responsible ones
in the NDC to stand up and be counted for truth.
Furthermore, the NDC strategy is hampering our development
by diverting the national conversation into areas that do
not advance the common interest.
Also, it is setting a bad example for the youth who regard
political leaders as role models. When our children see our
leaders lying all the time, why will they also not lie?
On behalf of the New Patriotic Party, I make today, an
urgent call to the NDC and its government to return to the
politics of truth and trust. The future of our children is
too important to be sacrificed by the divisive effects of
lies. I urge the President to deal with Ghanaians honestly
and to insist that all his appointees do so as well.
To be candid though, the NDC have had a lot of help in their
politics of distortion. Many in the media, through
incompetence or ill-motive have been eager to amplify
without verification, the lies spewed by the President and
his minions. I urge those in the media guilty of this great
betrayal of their profession and their country, to mend
their ways. Responsible journalists should not report what
politicians say without verification. Let the media
investigate and put out the truth about the lies I have
cited here, in the interest of journalism and our country.
Let the media withhold their microphones from those who put
out lies into our public square. Let the media investigate
the Okudzeto job claims, the economy Kufuor’s government
left for the NDC, how Amanjaro’s ban was lifted and the
Vice-President’s role, the state of crime and many other
important issues and put out the truth. Let them shine the
light on the number of spines that exist in our salary
structures.
While the executive is the major culprit here, Parliament
has been derelict as well. I urge Parliament to perform its
duty of executive oversight. Parliament must not be part of
the government’s misinformation campaigns. When phony
foreign companies are presented to Parliament as credible
entities that can give us loans far in excess of their
capitalization, Parliament must do due diligence and expose
the lies. When it lends its approval to such half-baked
proposals, it undermines its own credibility as well as that
of our democracy and our country.
To the general public, I urge that you hold government
functionaries and indeed all politicians accountable for
gaps between the truth and what they say. Let us discourage
the politics of lies by refusing to support politicians who
have chosen to build their careers on lies.
Today, I urge all Ghanaian institutions, the press and the
public to join me in a crusade to restore to our politics
truth-telling and trust.
Let us move forward, together and in truth.
God bless you and God bless Ghana.
Jake Otanka
Obetsebi-Lamptey
National ChairmanEW
PATRIOTIC PARTY
NEW PATRIOTIC
PARTY
Headquarters,
Private Mail Bag, Accra-North, Ghana
Tel: +233 21 227
737 / 229 030 / 228 104 Fax: +233 21 229 048
Email: nppdcom@gmail.com
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TRUTH IN OUR POLITICS
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