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   September 8, 2010


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Rawlings threatens to quit NDC - 11/25/2009 - Bookmark and Share

Source: Ghanaian Chronicle, cartoon from Daily Guide

The Former President, Flt Lft Jerry John Rawlings, says he would quit his NDC party if President John Mills and members of his administration do not sit up and live to the expectations of Ghanaians.

The former president, who is also the founder of the NDC, issued the threat when he met some constituency chairpersons of the party drawn from twenty-two constituencies in the Greater Accra Region on Tuesday, November, 17.

“If we do no wake up to correct the mistakes, I will not have anything to do with the party. I have died so many times for the party, been humiliated both locally and internationally. I cannot die for the greedy bastards who have wormed their way into government,” He said.

Mr. Rawlings spares no punches anytime he gets the opportunity to lash at President Mills. He has on several public platforms attacked President Mills and has accused him of lacking what he terms the revolutionary zeal in his government.

In an interview with Citi FM on Friday, November 20, the spokesperson to the former President, Kofi Adams said Mr. Rawlings is worried that his good intentions to keep the Mills government in check has been misconstrued by some “strange people in the NDC” who say he (Mr. Rawlings) is harbouring presidential ambitions.

The NDC founder told the Greater Accra constituency Chairmen of the NDC that he observed some fundamental blunders in the Mills’ administration right from the onset, but when he publicly pointed them out to ensure that matters did not escalate, nothing significant was done to improve the situation.

“We have brought people into our midst who are unknown to the party, people we do not know,” he said.

He charged the rank and file of the party, especially the foot soldiers, “to wake up and take their destiny into their own hands. When we won, I thought I could retire and write my memoirs, but I am not being allowed to do that.

I have suffered humiliation, assassination attempts, and abuse, and now I am facing the same with my party’s government? We seem to be afraid to right the wrongs of the past, and now the criminals of the past government are emboldened, and many have entrenched themselves in the military and other sensitive institutions.”

The former President could not, but charge members of the party he formed, to demand accountability from Professor Mills and his NDC administration, since, according to him, “there is no point in complaining about unfulfilled promises without a courageous attempt to confront government.”

The constituency chairmen sought audience with the former President to express misgivings about the break in communication between the party and government.

They were particularly concerned about the failure of the Presidency to accord them audience, despite repeated requests, and said it was dampening the mood in the party.

But Rawlings said he was well aware of the discontentment among most of the party supporters, saying, “They think you constituency chairmen, are comfortable. Unfortunately, you are also in the same situation as they are.”

Spokesman for the group and constituency chairman for La Dadekotopon, Magnus Anyetei Sowah, said the supporters had spent years working for the party to return to power, but unfortunately the synergy between government and party had totally broken down.

According to him, the Ga constituencies had played a yeoman’s role in returning the NDC into power, and therefore noted that it was unacceptable that they were being ignored in such a shabby manner.

He mentioned how some members of government have sought to silence them by threatening them not to speak publicly about their disenchantment or face their wrath.

Furthermore, Mr. Rawlings said it was unfortunate that issues of electoral fraud that nearly caused the NDC to lose last year’s election, have not been brought to the fore, even though there was enough evidence to expose it, asking theoretically, “do we not understand politics?

For this reason, the former President said it was important for members of the party to make wise decisions during the ongoing constituency and polling station elections, to ensure that only people who genuinely care for the people are elected, saying “we should not allow this party to be destroyed by any self-seeker.”

Earlier last Wednesday, a group of former parliamentary candidates, drawn from the Greater and Ashanti regions, also called on the former President to express similar sentiments of discontentment with the party’s failure to accord its faithful courtesies and audience.

Their spokesperson, Augustus Kweku Eshun, said the government and party leaders had failed to take stock of how victory was achieved, noting that some policies being currently implemented by the government were unpopular with the people, and could affect the fortunes of the NDC in 2012.

The candidates, who took turns to express their grievances, said they were disappointed that some of them were being tagged as pro-Rawlings, and thus against Mills administration.


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