Press Release
NPP
December 28, 2012
STATEMENT BY THE NPP 2012 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, NANA
AKUFO-ADDO, ON THE FILING OF THE SUPREME COURT PETITION
CHALLENGING THE VALIDITY OF THE RESULT OF THE 2012
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION, AT A PRESS CONFERENCE ON 28TH DECEMBER
2012 AT THE ALISA HOTEL, ACCRA.
“EVERY VOTE MUST COUNT”
As our Chairman has indicated, a few minutes ago, a petition
was filed at the Registry of the Supreme Court, challenging
the validity of the result of the presidential election as
declared by the Electoral Commission, through its Chairman, on
December 9th, 2012.
On 10th December, 2012, the Chairman issued C.I. 80 setting
out “The Declaration of President-Elect Instrument 2012” in
which the NDC presidential candidate, John Dramani Mahama, was
declared the first-round winner of the election. C.I 80 was
notified in the Gazette on 11th December, 2012.
The petitioners are three of us Ghanaian citizens, me, Nana
Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, the NPP presidential candidate in the
election, Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, my running mate and Jake Otanka
Obetsebi-Lamptey, Chairman of the New Patriotic Party.
The respondents to the petition are the President-Elect, John
Dramani Mahama, the person, according to the Rules of the
Court, “whose election is challenged by the petition”; and the
Electoral Commission, whose conduct is the subject of the
complaint in the petition.
The case is in court officially in our names because the law
requires that an election petition challenging the validity of
the election of the President of the Republic should be
mounted by a citizen. But this is not a personal issue. This
case is not about candidate Mahama or candidate Akufo-Addo.
There is a much more important issue at stake, which goes to
the heart of our democracy and the future of our nation.
This action is being taken on behalf of the more than five
million people that, according to the Electoral Commission,
voted for me, to whom I am very grateful; and on behalf of all
the eleven million people who stood in line patiently on
December 7th, and in some cases, also on December 8th, 2012 to
cast their votes and also on behalf of all 24 million citizens
and on behalf of generations yet unborn.
We of the New Patriotic Party, the party I belong to and which
I had the honour to represent in the election, trace our
antecedents to the men and women who gathered in Saltpond on
that fateful day of Saturday, 4th August, 1947 to begin the
battle for the independence of our country from foreign rule.
The nation they envisaged on that occasion was to be a
democratic and prosperous state. It has, therefore, been easy
for us to be consistent in pursuing our political goals: we
rejected the various political concepts that were tried on
Ghanaians, be they fashionable or freshly brewed; the
one-party state, the life-president, Union Government, and the
various military interventions. We believed and fought for the
establishment of a multi-party democracy in our country and we
consider it our sacred duty to work for the deepening of the
system of governance we have fought for so long and hard. This
is why we are pleased with the stability and development of
the democratic process of the past twenty years, and the
improvement in the quality of life of our people that has
taken place in that period.
Democracies are founded on elections. No true democrat can
disregard the importance of elections and the sanctity of the
ballot. In 1992, when the first elections to usher in the
Fourth Republic were held, we had grave misgivings about the
conduct of the polls; we wrote a book narrating what we saw as
undermining the credibility of the elections. The book, ‘The
Stolen Verdict’, helped create a conducive atmosphere for the
reform of our electoral system. Since then, we have continued
to work hard to improve the electoral process in our country.
We can say that almost every innovation that the Electoral
Commission has brought to improve the process has been at the
instigation of the NPP, and often in the face of initial
resistance from the Electoral Commission: transparent ballot
boxes, photo-ID cards, biometric registration and
verification, and to that list I might add the fact that we,
the ruling party of the day, accepted in 2008 a verdict of
losing a presidential election by the narrowest of margins
without any fuss. All these have made Ghana a shining example.
I might make a personal interjection here to state that I have
spent much of my adult life in fighting for the establishment
of the democratic system of government and human rights in our
country. And I have always fought for and advocated for a
credible electoral process in Ghana.
In emphasizing the importance of elections, it must be pointed
out that the sanctity of the ballot is and must be supreme. In
an election, we cast votes, then the votes are counted, the
count is collated, the results are announced and formal
declarations of results are made. In the entire process, we
must never forget that it is the casting of the ballot that is
sacred, the rest of the activities are at best, administrative
duties. The count, the collation, the declaration of results
cannot and should not be more important than the sacred,
God-given right of a citizen casting his or her ballot. There
is only one principle. Elections are about those who cast the
vote, not those who count, not those who supervise, not those
who transmit and not those who declare. The heart of the
democratic process is about those who cast the vote.
By the afternoon of December 8th, enough reports had come into
the NPP election headquarters to make us believe that the
elections had been marred by lots of irregularities to
undermine the credibility of the elections. The party did try
to alert the Electoral Commission and recommend pause to
investigate our concerns. The Electoral Commission would not
listen and adopted the attitude that had always characterised
their reaction to any criticism of their actions: “if you are
dissatisfied, go to court.”
It was not an easy decision for us to tell the people of Ghana
that we would not accept the results of the elections as
declared by the Chairman of the Electoral Commission, but we
had to accept the responsibility of righting, what in our
view, was the wrong of an invalid election. In deciding to go
to court, we were well aware that we were taking on a heavy
responsibility and it turned out to be as massive a task as we
had feared.
The scale of what we have uncovered has surprised even the
most skeptical among us. Personally, it has been a sad
experience. Dr Bawumia will soon take you through the details
of our findings and if you believe in the rule of law and the
sanctity of the ballot, I dare say you will also be sad.
Dr. Afari Gyan told everybody, no verification, no vote; so
why was there such blatant disregard of the law. Dr Afari Gyan
told us there would not and should not be more votes in the
box than there were ballots given out; so why were there so
many stations of obvious “over voting”? Dr. Afari Gyan told us
the count and collation would be open; so why were there so
many instances of dubious counts. We are ready to concede that
in an election that involves more than eleven million voters,
there might be mistakes; but why are the arithmetic mistakes
so very often in favour of the NDC candidate, John Dramani
Mahama?
We have now put our case before the court, and are also
putting the case before you, the people of Ghana. We leave it
for the court to judge the merits. But once again, the NPP,
through the petitioners in this case, is seeking to deepen our
democracy by strengthening the institutions that are mandated
by our Constitution to superintend the electoral process: (1)
by ensuring that the Electoral Commission is accountable to
the people of Ghana, and (2) the Supreme Court is seen by all
as the ultimate arbiter of electoral grievances and disputes.
Throughout the campaign, the elections and this three-week
period since the elections, we have insisted and continue to
insist on the peaceful conduct of all activities and I am
proud to say that NPP supporters, in common with the
overwhelming majority of Ghanaians, have behaved commendably.
We in the NPP do not seek to destabilize our country, we are
not revolutionaries. But we do seek to ensure that the will of
the Ghanaian people is upheld, and we do seek to uphold the
sanctity of the ballot through peaceful, legitimate means.
We have every confidence that President Mahama and the NDC
would be interested also that the right thing is done. The
Justices of the Supreme Court will take up their
responsibilities and by the time they make their
pronouncements we expect that Ghana would be a stronger and
more credible democracy.
I thank the NPP members, supporters and volunteers for their
hard work and patience. I thank especially all those who were
involved in the massive BLUE/RED SHEET RETRIEVAL effort. The
battle is, indeed, the Lord’s and we should all continue to
pray. I thank those Ghanaian citizens, who are not necessarily
NPP supporters, who have urged us on to seek justice in the
courts and I thank you all for your attention. My belief in
Ghana remains unshaken.
May God bless Ghana and us all.
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