PRESS STATEMENT
August 29, 2012
LET’S STOP AFARI DJAN AND THE
ELECTORAL COMMISSION
In January 2001 we concluded, for the very first time in our
history, the handing over of National Office from one political
party to another through the ballot box. And we did it
peacefully, to the admiration of the whole world.
In 2008, in a most fiercely contested election from which the
victor emerged by some 40,000 votes out of more than 9million
counted, in spite of more than 200,000 spoilt ballots, we again
achieved this feat, without an insistence on a recount . This
time, to such fulsome acclaim that the newly elected part
African President of the United States of America, Barack Obama
made our nation his first visit to his home continent.
In 2012, we suffered the challenge of the sudden death of our
sitting President. Once again, Ghanaian democratic credentials
and commitment to peace were eloquently displayed in the manner
in which we handled the transition to a new President and the
selection of a new Vice President.
We now approach the general elections of 2012 and all Ghanaians
and all friends of Ghana are praying fervently that, once more,
Ghana will live up to her exalted status by having a free,
transparent, fair and peaceful election.
Achieving peace is up to all of us, we must not only pray for it
but we must work for it. Some have a higher responsibility than
others. We in the N.P.P. point to our proven tradition of
accepting election results and assure everyone that we shall not
be the cause of any disruption of a peaceful process.
We are worried however about a number of developments, any of
which, coming about would put our peace at risk. We promise to
investigate and share with Ghanaians whatever we find of concern
in the hope and belief that a bright light can stop mischief.
Today, I bring to the nation’s notice, our deep concern about
the Electoral Commission. Like Caesar’s wife, the Electoral
Commission must be seen to be above suspicion. Even in sports,
it is when the people doubt the neutrality of the referee that
mayhem erupts. The Electoral Commission is allowing doubt about
its neutrality to seep into the nation.
The 45 Constituencies that the Commission is determined to
create do not yet exist. Why then are the Electoral Commission’s
officers illegally conducting primaries for the N.D.C. in the as
yet non-existent constituencies? Why are they seeking to give
unfair advantage to the N.D.C at the expense of the law abiding
parties?
The Chairman of the Electoral Commission has categorically
charged all parliamentary candidates to be in their
constituencies to monitor and help with the smooth conduct of
the exhibition of the voter’s register. He has stated that he
does not want anyone coming to him afterwards to make any
complaint about the register. Why then is he putting pressure on
the parliamentary candidates to abandon their constituency
duties and be in parliament during the exhibition in order to
get his C.I. passed?
Every Political Party is entitled to contest the new
constituencies when they are created. Given that the parties all
wish to do so and in obedience to their party and the National
Constitution they want to organize primaries to be ready for
filing in early October, can the Chairman and Commission
guarantee they can meet their own Constitutional duty to conduct
all the primaries in the same period that they will be doing
their work on the new registers. Registers which we need to have
in place to enable the parties obey the law that candidates and
those who vote for them in primaries are registered in
constituencies which as yet do not exist?
Those N.D.C. members who have been elected as candidates for the
proposed new constituencies have been illegally elected with the
active connivance of the Electoral Commission. Simply, the
constituencies do not exist and so can have no register. The
constituencies do not exist so no one can be living in them or
can hail from them. They don’t exist.
The chairman and the Electoral Commission are sending strong
signals of potentially destructive bias. They must not allow
themselves to be seen as ‘dancing’ to anyone’s tune. They must
be above suspicion.
We call on all well-meaning Ghanaians to realize that this is
not the N.P.P. crying wolf but bringing to your notice, for your
action, something that could disturb our peace. We do not have
to take any risk with our future just to put 45 more people into
Parliament.
Let everyone tell the Electoral Commission and its Chairman that
they cannot play “Had I known” with our peace and security. We
do not need to gamble with our lives and our safety.
Signed
Jake Otanka Obetsebi-Lamptey
National Chairman
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