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Politics of Thursday, 11 August 2016

Source: classfmonline.com

'Kayayei' are our 'biggest celebs' in 2016 polls – NPP

File photo: Head porters File photo: Head porters

The underprivileged in society, such as itinerant head porters (Kayayei) and scrap dealers, are the celebrities that will give the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) victory in the 7 December polls, the party’s National Youth Organiser, Sammi Awuku, has said.

Mr Awuku said ahead of this year’s presidential and parliamentary elections, the citizens at the lowest bracket of society, especially the least-privileged youth, have demonstrated that they are no longer interested in the “lies and propaganda” of the governing National Democratic Congress (NDC).

Speaking to Kayayei, scrap dealers, the less-privileged and unemployed youth at a public forum at Agbogbloshie, a suburb of Accra, on Thursday as part of events to mark International Youth Day, which falls on Friday, 12 August, Mr Awuku said unlike the NDC, “we could not pay celebrities to come and endorse this forum, [but] the biggest celebrity will be the ‘kayayei’, who will make the difference in this year’s elections. The biggest celebrities we have are the teacher trainees and the nurse trainees, who have nowhere to go. Our biggest celebrity this year and in this elections is the scrap dealer who cannot make ends meet, and the biggest celebrity we will need in this year’s elections is the Ghanaian youth, who will not only vote for change [but] organise for change and mobilise for change.”

Mr Awuku said: “…Our friends [kayayei and other participants] have just testified to the crisis our dear country faces today, the crisis that is affecting every young Ghanaian as they try to make their way in life. What we have just said represents the voice of the real Ghanaian youth. These are the voices that John Mahama and the NDC refuse to hear. We are forced to listen and endure ministers of state, paid NDC communicators and propagandists, and NDC big men all the time on radio where they paint a picture of Ghana being like Dubai…after they have driven in their big cars, collected their fat salaries from the Flagstaff House – a clear case of Animal Farm in this country. But judging from the mood in this country today, I am certain, we are certain, that Ghana’s youth are no longer interested in the…propaganda, rhetoric, and lies.”

Class FM’s Paa Kwesi Parker-Wilson, who covered the event, reported that some of the participants had revealed erratic power supply had collapsed their businesses, hence would not hesitate to vote for the NPP to change the trend. According to them, there was no end in sight for the problem, hence their decision to vote out the current government.