Washington based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIC),
says the presidential candidate of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Nana
Akufo-Addo is the biggest threat to peace and stability in Ghana.
In its latest Africa report published last June, titled: titled GHANA;
Assessing Risks to Stability, authored By David W. Throup, highlighted
what it says are the “Key Stress Points,” and Akufo- Addo’s posture
since he was elected the presidential candidate of the opposition NPP.
The project which was commissioned by the U.S. Africa Command
(AFRICOM), also touched on Akufo-Addo’s track record and his public
utterances such as the infamous “All-die-be-die,” “We Akans,” “President
at all cost, so forth.
*The report categorically pointed out that the presidential candidate
of the opposition is a threat to peace and stability in Ghana because
his actions and utterance is not geared towards consensus building.* The
report highlights the three key stress points as follows:
“Key Stress Points ... The role of the NPP leader and expected
presidential candidate, Nana Akufo-Addo, will be crucial, and early
signals suggest reason for worry. Akufo-Addo is desperate to mobilize
support, and he has played the ethnic card, referring to the NPP as “We
the Akans,” urging his supporters to “all die be die”—that is, they
should be willing to die to ensure the NPP’s victory.
Akufo-Addo’s Track Record There is talk in town that had it not been
the timely intervention of the then President J. A. Kufour, it would
have been difficult for Akufo-Addo to concede defeat. The lack of
support from the Commander-in-Chief of the Ghana Armed Forces meant that
Akufo-Addo found himself cold on the ice, as the military
configurations did not go in his favour.
The second bad news was the failure to surreptitiously secure a legal
injunction by ex parte motion to sit and hear the case on the 1st of
January 2009, a public holiday, without even informing the Electoral
Commission, nor the NDC. He was compelled to come out to “acknowledge
the Electoral Commission’s declaration and congratulate Prof. Mills”.
Ghana had a lucky escape during the last presidential election in
December 2008. The razor-thin failure of the NPP candidate, Nana
Akufo-Addo, to win the presidency on the first ballot (he missed out by
less than 8,000 votes) briefly tempted the NPP to hang on to power and
challenge the official results. In the hours following the election,
then–president Kufuor played a vital role in urging his NPP supporters
to accept the need for a second round.
When the NDC candidate, Atta-Mills, won the second round by the narrow
margin of 0.46 percent, President Kufuor again urged acceptance of the
result. But given that he is now in retirement, Kufuor is unlikely to be
able to exert a moderating influence in 2012. And the NPP hard-liners
seem to have seized control of the campaign. Given the stakes involved,
the 2012 election campaign is likely to be far more confrontational and
potentially violent, the report concluded.
Source: The True Statesman
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