Flag bearer of the All People's Congress (APC), Hassan Ayariga, has said he is a proud owner of four sports cars, which he uses to indulge in racing.
"I like racing. I have a series of sports cars – about four. I have the Panamera – the latest brand of the Porshce (four exhausts), I have a Toyota MR2, the one that looks like the MR8. I have the Audi TTS," he said on Wednesday.
Mr Ayariga also said he has a mansion with four swimming pools in his hometown, Bawku, in the Upper East Region of Ghana. One of the pools, he said, is suspended.
The 44-year-old politician, who says he made his first million dollars at age 24, said if he could achieve such feats with his life despite coming from a very impoverished part of the country, then he was willing to create an enabling environment in Ghana for every citizen to prosper, should he win the presidency.
Mr Ayariga and 12 other presidential nominees were recently disqualified from the 2016 presidential poll for various clerical infractions as far as filling their nominations forms is concerned.
His disqualification got him angry, causing him to describe the Chair of the Electoral Commission, Mrs Charlotte Osei as "stupid" and "foolish" when he spoke to Class91.3FM's Emefa Apawu minutes after the announcement of his fate.
Mr Ayariga, who said he made his riches by importing second-hand electrical equipment and appliances to Ghana from Germany, and selling, as well as operating pizza restaurants in both Germany and Ghana, coupled with other businesses, noted that he single-handedly funds his political campaign. He has, therefore, dismissed assertions that he is a stooge of the governing National Democratic Congress (NDC) and being bankrolled by same.
Buttressing his point, Mr Ayariga revealed that he had so far spent about $4.5 million on vehicles for his presidential bid – all from his own coffers. The big brother of Mr Mahama Ayariga, Minister of Environment, Science, Technology and Innovation, who belongs to the NDC, said he has bought about 30 Pick-up trucks and a number of SUVs, including Land Cruisers, to help him execute his campaign for this year's polls.
He, therefore, said his disqualification from the race, after having spent that amount of money and more, got him "upset", thus his hurling of abuses at the EC Chair. "I'm not a happy man when it comes to things that I do right and somebody will disqualify us," Mr Ayariga said on Wednesday. He has, however, apologised to Mrs Osei and all Ghanaians. He told Accra-based Starr FM that he was a "gentleman" who had a lot of respect for women and mothers.
Apart from Mr Ayariga, the other aspirants who were disqualified from the race over various anomalies include Dr Edward Mahama of the People's National Convention (PNC); Dr Agyenim Boateng of the United Front Party (UFP); Kofi Akpaloo of the Independent People's Party (IPP); Kwabena Adjei of the Reformed Patriotic Democrats (RPD); and Dr Papa Kwesi Nduom of the Progressive People's Party (PPP).
The others include: Dr Henry Herbert Lartey of the Great Consolidated Popular Party (GCPP); Mr Richard Nixon Tetteh (United Development Systems Party); Thomas Ward-Brew of the Democratic People's Party (DPP); Alfred Kwame Asiedu Walker, an independent candidate, and Akua Donkor of the Ghana Freedom Party (GFP). Mr Akwasi Addae Odike of the United Progressive Party's nomination is on hold pending a court case.