Tag: Minority

  • SONA 2020: We did not boycott, we only walked out – Minority

    The Minority in Parliament has explained the reason behind their walkout during the 2020 State of the Nation Address (SONA).

    The Minority in a press conference said they walked out to show President Akufo-Addo that if he is insensitive to the issues affecting Ghanaians they can equally be insensitive to his State of the Nation Address.

    The presser was chaired by the Minority leader Haruna Iddrisu saw the Minority give several reasons for the walkout.

    They said their views and inputs into matters affecting the nation are often shelved by the Majority and that is not helping democracy in the country.

    One major reason they gave was that the President does not listen to their views and opinion concerning the plans to compile a new Voters Register.

    They then said Ghana’s democracy is under threat and President Akufo-Addo is the one hindering the progress of this important factor.

    The Majority who are agitated by this walkout says the Minority demonstrated bad faith by welcoming the President and other dignitaries but later walked out.

    The Minority leader responding to that said in 2013 the NPP boycotted President Mahama’s SONA among others and that set a bad precedent.

    He also revealed that what they did is not against the rules governing parliamentary proceedings.

    Mr. Iddrissu ended by saying that they will decide whether to participate in the SONA debate in parliament if that is opened up for discussion later.

    Below is their statement

    STATEMENT BY MINORITY ON THE WALKOUT AT TODAY’S STATE OF THE NATION ADDRESS AS ADDRESSED BY MINORITY LEADER, HON. HARUNA IDDRISU IN PARLIAMENT

    We duly welcome you to this press briefing and thank you for your continuous indulgence and dedicated contributions to free expression in Ghana.

    We, constituting the Minority in Ghana’s Parliament have convened this press interaction to put forth the reasons for staging a walkout on the day the president was expected to deliver a message on the state of the nation as required by Article 67 of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana.

    From the outset, we need to make clear that these are not normal times in the democratic trajectory of our country.

    We are clad in black today to mourn the fascist and authoritarian tendencies that have conspired to threaten the health of Ghana’s democracy.

    Since becoming President of our republic, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has conducted the affairs of state with the kind of tyranny, despotism and authoritarianism that frightens many objective observers.

    We have in the face of extreme provocation exercised restraint and urged the president to depart from his perilous path that puts the democracy of our country at great risk.

    Sadly, matters are totally out of control. The democracy we all toiled and sacrificed to establish is now threatened by the highhandedness of President Akufo-Addo. The man who in opposition styled himself as a champion democrat has turned out to be a nightmare and an existential threat to our fledgling democracy.

    We continue to witness heightened impunity from officialdom.

    As we speak, the President has refused to implement the recommendations of the Emile Short Commission following the state-sponsored terrorism that occurred during the Ayawaso West Wuogon by-election in January 2019. The President continues to shield his indicted appointees as he even confers on them more authority to perpetrate mayhem ahead of the 2020 presidential and parliamentary elections.

    Contrary to the Emile Short Commission recommendation, President Akufo-Addo has blatantly refused to disband the illegal SWAT team which has been populated by known hoodlums belonging to his vigilante groups.

    Many more of these bloodthirsty hoodlums continue to be trained at national security installations and are being armed ahead of the 2020 elections.

    President Akufo-Addo goes down in history as the only President in the Fourth Republic to supervise the cruel removal of Chairperson of the Electoral Commission, Madam Charlotte Osei. That conduct in infamy appears to have paved the way for an elaborate scheme to rig the 2020 elections by compiling a new Voters Register. Majority Leader Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu let the cat out of the bag when he stated emphatically that if the NPP was successful in compiling a new Voters Register, the NDC will never come back to power. One wonders how a register that brought the NDC to power in 2012 and the NPP to power in 2016 can suddenly become so discredited in the eyes of the NPP if not for the sinister agenda exposed inadvertently by the Majority Leader.

    The Akufo-Addo-led Government in cahoots with the Jean Mensah-led Electoral Commission remains intransigent despite overwhelming public opposition including from a strong coalition of Civil Society Organisations and Political Parties. We cannot help but agree with the US State Department Human Rights report which has raised concerns of possible voter suppression in opposition strongholds as the real intention for the needless and wasteful new Voters Register.

    Under President Akufo-Addo’s watch, media freedoms and free expression have come under unprecedented attack. The Government has still not found the killers of investigative journalist, Ahmed Hussain-Suale who was assassinated in cold blood. Despite demands from the international community for action, he refuses to speak to the matter and no updates on investigations have been provided. Many journalists continue to be attacked, with others having to seek refuge outside the jurisdiction.

    His Government continues to close down Radio stations particularly those with affiliation to his political opponents. Only last week, his administration after the Gestapo closures of Radio Gold and Radio XYZ, and many others, closed down Radio Tongu and Fox FM, Takoradi in the most bizarre of circumstances.

    The growing culture of impunity and the tyranny that has reached alarming proportions was once again on the prowl when agents of National Security demolished businesses belonging to Ghanaians in the private sector located at the Ghana Trade Fair Site at dawn under the cover of darkness. Not even notice was served on the owners to take out their valuables ahead of the barbaric demolition. We are not in any doubt that the cruel nature of the demolishing which has been justified by the President’s appointees and spokespersons was targeted at former award-winning journalist, Raymond Archer who many in this administration have not forgiven for his incisive and explosive investigative pieces of yesteryears.

    As noted, these are not normal times. Desperate times call for desperate measures. Our tradition is credited for laying the foundations for this Fourth Republican dispensation. It is our moral duty to the Constitution we swore to protect and the people we serve in this House to rise and resist oppressor’s rule – in that enduring and rallying call of our national anthem.

    Our walkout was therefore a bold protest against tyranny and to send a very clear message directly to President Akufo-Addo that enough is enough. We shall no longer accept the growing levels of impunity and unconstitutionalism masked by duplicitous and hollow rhetoric.

    Ghana belongs to all of us and so shall we all stand to defend the democracy we have all laboured for. Like Thomas Jefferson, we declare: “I have sworn upon the altar of God, eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man.”

    Thank you for your attention.

     

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • Govt to pay MPs Common Fund after Minority threatens to boycott State of the Nation Address

    The Finance Ministry says they are in the process of paying MPs share of the District Assemblies Common Fund.

    Deputy Minister for Finance Abena Osei Asare said all arrears for the third quarter of the Common Fund have been paid and the Ministry is in the process of paying MPs their share of the fund.

    The Minority yesterday threatened to boycott next week’s State of the Nation Address over the nonpayment of MP’s share of the District Assemblies Common Fund.

    The Minority also gave the government 48 hours to release the MP’s share of the Common Fund for the third quarter of 2019.

    According to them, failure to do this will warrant a total boycott of the State of the Nation Address by the President next week Thursday.

    MP for Bodi Constituency, Sampson Ahi speaking after a Minority Caucus meeting said the action by government is deliberate.

    He added that these are the funds that the MPs used to work effectively at their various constituencies.

    “We have realised that the government has taken decision to deprive Members of Parliament of working effectively in our various constituencies, we are saying this because close to two months ago the government released the Common Fund to the district assemblies as we speak we don’t know when they are going to release the MP’s share for the fund. We see to it to be a deliberate attempt on the part of government to deprive us, being election year the time that they will release the monies we will get resources to work and that is why they have taken that decision to deprive us of our resources to work, we are giving them up to Friday if we don’t hear anything realistic we will consider boycotting the State of the Nation Address…..’

    But responding to the demand of the Minority, Abena Osei Asare said they are in the process of paying the MPs their share of the Common Fund.

    “…..and then the MPs also get their portion, as i speak to you and you can find out from the district assemblies, the third quarter funds have been paid to them and we are working to also get MPs their share of the Common Fund, as far as I know, it’s the district assemblies fund and there is a component for the MPs…….so we are in the process of issuing that of the MPs too.

     

    Source: primenewsghana.com