Nana Addo even won 2012 but Atuguba gave it to Mahama. Nana Addo will win 2016 in first round
Nana Addo even won 2012 but Atuguba gave it to Mahama. Nana Addo will win 2016 in first round
Kojo 9 years ago
After all this writer put forward; is this your reply? "Nana Addo even won 2012 but Atuguba gave it to Mahama. Nana Addo will win 2016 in first round" What is assuring you of William Addo fake lawyer victory in 2016? Why can' ... read full comment
After all this writer put forward; is this your reply? "Nana Addo even won 2012 but Atuguba gave it to Mahama. Nana Addo will win 2016 in first round" What is assuring you of William Addo fake lawyer victory in 2016? Why can't you go sit down and ask yourself if there is any truth in what this writer wrote. Then see what can be done to win more votes for NPP. Or you are too busy being what you always are. Big talk, and sliding by. You want to swim without getting wet. I know you so much and all those who will not vote for you know too. Until you do the right things you will not get my vote. It's a promise.
Patapaa 9 years ago
With "Twenty Seven Zero" taken as "270" in favor of looter and thief Mahama? This will never happen again. Nana beat Mahama in the first round and he schemed and bribed to steal the run-off. 2016 is not far off so let's wait ... read full comment
With "Twenty Seven Zero" taken as "270" in favor of looter and thief Mahama? This will never happen again. Nana beat Mahama in the first round and he schemed and bribed to steal the run-off. 2016 is not far off so let's wait and see
Mahmoud 9 years ago
Author: Kafui Ama
Date: 2009-07-23 01:44:06
Please be patient and read this to the end.
By Craig Murray, former Deputy British High Commisssioner to Ghana | Posted: Tuesday, January 20, 2009
... It was Novembe ... read full comment
Author: Kafui Ama
Date: 2009-07-23 01:44:06
Please be patient and read this to the end.
By Craig Murray, former Deputy British High Commisssioner to Ghana | Posted: Tuesday, January 20, 2009
... It was November 1999 and I'd been Deputy High Commissioner in Ghana for almost a year - the culmination of 15 years' Foreign Office service in Nigeria, Warsaw and the equatorial Africa department in London.
I'd always been passionate about Africa and had immersed myself in its minutiae. Nevertheless, my father, who had a timber yard in Ghana in the Sixties, offered a little extra counsel before I departed, aged 40. 'If you see any good-looking girl, aged about 30, light skinned, whatever you do, don't touch her - she could be your sister!'
Not that this was a big concern for me. My most pressing duty was the 1999 State Visit by the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh, Enhanced Coverage Linking the Duke of Edinburgh, -Search using: Biographies Plus News, Most Recent 60 Days, accompanied by Robin Cook, the then Foreign Secretary. It was a three-day blur of activity, the teeming crowds displaying an uncomplicated and old-fashioned reverence.
A warning that the Duke was averse to looking at things without useful purpose proved absolutely right. As we stood looking at the strip of brass laid in a churchyard that marked the line of the Greenwich Meridian, he said to me: 'A line in the ground, eh? Very nice.'
Ghana epitomises much of the best of Africa, but also throws into relief the tragedy of the continent. It has maintained its higher education and has fewer extremes of wealth than elsewhere. But at independence in 1957, Ghana was richer than Argentina, Brazil, Malaysia or Singapore. Today, those countries are at least ten times as wealthy.
Corruption, cronyism, economic mismanagement, irresponsible lending by the West and the dumping of cheap food all did for Ghana. When I arrived with my wife Fiona and children Jamie and Emily, Ghana had been ruled for 20 years by Flight Lieutenant Jerry Rawlings.
The son of a Stirlingshire pharmacist and a local woman, he seized power in a coup in 1979, but claimed to have won presidential elections in 1992 and 1996, despite allegations of vote-rigging.
In his early years, Rawlings unleashed a political terror on Ghana. His campaign against the middle classes resembled Mao's Cultural Revolution. People were persecuted for having savings or two indoor lavatories. Market women were sometimes killed for 'profiteering'.
The Queen's visit delighted Rawlings, who craved international respectability. I, too, was determined to make the most of the trip, by helping ensure Rawlings gave up power by the start of 2001, as the constitution required because he had served two four-year terms.
The Queen's speech to the parliament in the capital, Accra, was to be the focus of the visit and I had contributed to its drafting. It contained the usual guff about a future based upon partnership, but there was a sting in the tail. 'Next, year, Mr President,' the Queen intoned, 'you will step down after two terms in office in accordance with your constitution.' The opposition benches went wild and the Queen stopped, looking in bewilderment at the hullabaloo.
Afterwards, Robin Cook was furious. 'It's a disaster. Who the hell drafted that?'
'Er, I did, Secretary of State,' I said. 'I might have guessed! Who the hell approved it?' 'You did.' Cook's Private Secretary had to dig out the draft he had signed. After the State banquet, I retired to a hotel bar with the Royal Household. The senior staff had withdrawn to allow the butlers, footmen and hairdressers to let off steam.
The party appeared, to a man, to be gay. Not just gay, but outrageously camp. We'd taken the hotel for the Royal party, but allowed the British Airways crew to stay. Now three cabin stewards, two Royal footmen and a Royal hairdresser were grouped around the piano singing hits from Cabaret. I was seated on a sofa and across from me in an armchair was a member of the Household who seemed out of place. The valet looked to be in his 60s, a grizzled NCO with tufts of hair either side of a bald pate, a boxer's nose and tattoos on his arms.
He was smoking roll-ups. I turned to the old warrior and said: 'Don't you find all this a bit strange sometimes?' He lent forward, put his hand on my bare knee below the kilt I wore on ceremonial occasions and said: 'Listen, ducks. I was in the Navy for 30 years.' I think he was joking, but some things are too weird even for me. The lower reaches of the Royal Household are one of them.
One enjoyable aspect of our time in Ghana was the constant stream of visitors. Among them was Peter Hain, the Minister for Africa. Hain, a good footballer, agreed to play in a charity match between children from a community football scheme and the High Commission.
Unfortunately, the ground was hard and the opposition turned out to be super-fit professionals. After a heavy tackle, I went down. Result: a dislocated shoulder. I couldn't move my arm for eight weeks. Other visitors included Clare Short, at the time Secretary of State for International Development.
She was in Ghana to try to persuade it to join a debt relief scheme. At a dinner for her, a Minister had made a speech about how much Ghana had learnt from the British Empire. Short stood up and expostulated: 'The British Empire! Don't tell me about the British Empire. I know about British colonialism. My father was Irish and we know about British colonialism. I'll tell you what the British did to your country. They exploited it, that's what they did. They exploited it.' After a few moments of stunned silence, the dinner continued.
On another occasion we were joined by Bobby Charlton, who came to Ghana seeking support for England's bid to host the 2006 World Cup. He was still an astounding player at 60 and it was good of him to get on the pitch for a local community football programme. Nevertheless, I found Charlton disappointing. He was self-centred and ratty - one of those heroes you wish you hadn't met.
Conversely, Roger Moore, a UNICEF goodwill ambassador, was charming and suave, just as you would expect, with a fund of brilliant stories beginning with lines such as: 'One day, Frank, Dean, Tony and I decided to play a trick on Marilyn ... ' He was also well briefed about children's issues in Ghana and was prepared not just to do PR, but to get his hands dirty helping in refugee camps without a camera in sight.
I was less taken with Jamie Theakston.
The BBC were filming a wildlife programme in Ghana, looking at the endangered green turtle population near Ada. A group of young volunteers had accompanied the BBC team to help the newly-born turtles to reach the ocean. But one girl, in her mid-20s, had streams of mascara running down her cheeks. She claimed Theakston had just broken up with her - yet here he was, surrounded by young women, enjoying the adulation.
I had bigger concerns, however. Ghana's presidential and parliamentary elections were due in December 2000 and there were signs that its 11 million voters might be preparing for a change of government. Enthusiasm for politics was everywhere. Even in the meanest village, people gathered under the banyan tree listening to FM stations on a battered transistor and arguing about the coming change.
In the West, tired of our politicians' deceit, we no longer much value democracy. It is wonderful to see a people exercising for the first time their power over those who would govern them. Our job was to see the elections were free and fair, with Britain funding a £10 million programme for photo-ID cards to reduce electoral fraud. The exercise eradicated one million fake names.
Another practical new weapon was indelible ink: when somebody voted, their thumb was painted to stop them casting more than one vote. India was the only source of a truly permanent ink that could not be washed or rubbed off. I had also persuaded the Foreign Office to provide experts from the Electoral Reform Society. Further valuable additions were two British MPs, Roger Gale and Nigel Jones.
Rawlings's party, the National Democratic Congress (NDC), put up the vice President, John Atta Mills, as its presidential candidate. The opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) fielded John Kufuor. There is a tribal element in Ghanaian politics: the Ewe people vote overwhelmingly NDC; the Ashanti overwhelmingly NPP.
It was clear the governing party would not abandon power easily. Alarmed that it would lose, it had the high court declare the ID cards illegal because they disenfranchised legitimate voters. But the ruling was to no avail - the people took over. Polling station officers decided they were going to use ID cards anyway.
When first- round votes on December 7 were tallied; Kufuor had 48.4 per cent against Atta Mills's 44.8 per cent. The opposition was heading for a small majority but, with no candidate exceeding 50 per cent, a run- off was required. Ghana's 30 or so FM stations were vital in bringing democracy, so it was no surprise that the NDC moved against them.
On the evening before the poll, I took Roger Gale and Nigel Jones to visit Joy FM, possibly Ghana's most influential station. We were sitting in the office when an armed posse of Rawlings's security men arrived, saying they were closing the station on the President's instructions.
‘Good evening,' I said. ‘I am Craig Murray, Deputy British High Commissioner, and these gentlemen are Mr Roger Gale MP and Mr Nigel Jones MP, members of the British Parliament.' Gale added: ' Obviously there has been some mistake.
I thought I heard you say that you were closing down the station, but we are here to visit our fellow democracy, Ghana, and democracies don't close down radio stations.' The goons left. Joy FM never was closed. However, the NDC started to think I was a part of their problem and they assigned a secret service team to follow me around.
As the second round on December 28 approached, we discovered a problem: not enough Indian ink. We had paid for more, but it had to be specially made and would not be ready until December 24. This was cutting it tight and action was needed. Chartering a private plane to set off from India on Christmas Eve was easier said than done. Whitehall was in festive mode and unlikely to sanction spending quickly, so I used the Embassy's budget to pay for it.
Ghana's government did not want the Indian ink to get in and I was concerned it would be delayed by customs officials. So on Christmas Day 2000, instead of eating turkey, I stood baking on the airport tarmac. When our plane taxied in, we unloaded the boxes of little ink bottles on to two trucks. I escorted these out of the VIP gateway, helped by a substantial tip to the guards.
The truck drivers then delivered the ink to regional centres for distribution to constituencies. This was a game being played for high stakes, with real danger of civil war.
Hotheads in the ruling party might claim electoral fraud and mount a military takeover. The Ashanti could also react violently to losing. Every embassy was updating evacuation plans. Around 1am, the results started to come in. There was a more or less consistent swing to the opposition candidate, John Kufuor. You could have cut the atmosphere with a knife.
The coolest man in Ghana that night was the wry, chain-smoking Electoral Commissioner, Kwadwo Afari- Gyan, who received constant threatening phone calls instructing him to fix the result. Each time, the Electoral Commissioner replied: ' The result will be what the result will be. I am just making sure it is fairly counted.' Then, taking his umpteenth call, he stiffened. He summoned me to listen: it was his wife. Soldiers had come to their bungalow, taking her and his children hostage and threatening to kill them if he did not deliver the ' right' result.
Kwadwo barked down the phone: ' Put their leader on.' ‘Listen you little *****,' he snarled. 'How dare you come to my house and threaten my wife and children. I am sitting here with the British Deputy High Commissioner and he knows what is happening. Now get out of my home before we have you thrown into jail!' The soldier said: ' Yes, sir; sorry, sir.' Kwadwo then told his wife not to worry and calmly returned to his work.
By 3am on the second night only two constituencies were still to declare. Even if every voter there went for Atta Mills, Kufuor could still not be beaten.
The opposition had won - an African country ... had shown that democratic change could be achieved peacefully. Kufuor's eight years as President saw economic growth of more than 70 per cent - the first prolonged period since independence when Ghana was not getting poorer. But Ghanaians chose to exercise their democratic right to change and earlier this month narrowly elected Atta Mills.
Ghana is the only country in Africa to achieve the democratic norm of power alternating peacefully between parties at successive uninterrupted elections.
As I look back on my involvement with Africa over 30 years, I remain most proud of helping Ghanaians to attain democracy. It is an example that sadly, the rest of the continent has so far done little to follow.
But Ghana remains there - a glimmer of hope, an example to others and a rebuke to cynics who claim democracy is not possible in Africa.
captain rans 8 years ago
As the Israelites crossed the red sea,so shall nana crossed to victory in 2016.The battle may be tough but it take the mighty hand of God to deliver his children.Ghanaians are suffering with skyrocketing fuel prices.And i wan ... read full comment
As the Israelites crossed the red sea,so shall nana crossed to victory in 2016.The battle may be tough but it take the mighty hand of God to deliver his children.Ghanaians are suffering with skyrocketing fuel prices.And i want to categorically say that a vote to the ndc is that you are selling your future,and that posterity unborn will never forgive you.Though to humans it is impossible but with GOD all things are possible.Remember that we walk by faith but not by sight.Mahama has nothing to offer Ghanaians,As a captain i make sure the ship is in order and apply all that i need to safeguard my passengers onboard.But that of Mahama,he will be sitting there telling people ''yentei obiaa'' and will not care.There is no employment and the youth are suffering.Nana all the way to victory in 2016.
Uncle Al 9 years ago
You still believe this nonsense? Akufo Addo will lose again so start your weeping now.
You still believe this nonsense? Akufo Addo will lose again so start your weeping now.
Mozato 9 years ago
Is this Akan wonnabe really the 'Opanin' that he call himself? His infantile reasoning in this disgusting write up has exposed his stinky black arse as an immature Trokosi reprobate, a fool soldier trying to impress his usel ... read full comment
Is this Akan wonnabe really the 'Opanin' that he call himself? His infantile reasoning in this disgusting write up has exposed his stinky black arse as an immature Trokosi reprobate, a fool soldier trying to impress his useless pay masters under the guise of a stolen Akan name. " No condition is permanent" and what these Akan haters fail to see is that if the so called Asantefuo and Akyemfuo nkoaa party, the NPP, could match the entire Ghanaian voting community boot for boot, as witnessed in the 2008 and 2012 general elections, then Mahama and his incompetent stealing bandits should embrace themselves for the real battery in 2016 since Afari Gyan and Atuguba will not be there for them this time round. This silly name stealer analysis did not capture or underrate the unseen hands that vote on the quite for the Asante-Akyem party from the North, Brong/Bono, Central, Greater, Western and the routinely permanent 0.01% senseless/useless votes from Trokosiland. Nana is going to win 2016 from the North. Whoever doubt this should place a bet with me.
laski Abudu 9 years ago
No,nana can never be a president,we don't trust him hrh
No,nana can never be a president,we don't trust him hrh
Paul 9 years ago
We don't like him. No way
We don't like him. No way
adumtumi nyansfuo 9 years ago
Nigerians love ndc. There are 2 million plus nigerian citizens holding Ghanaian citizen cards. Ghana is in trouble.
Nigerians love ndc. There are 2 million plus nigerian citizens holding Ghanaian citizen cards. Ghana is in trouble.
K. Boateng 9 years ago
Kuffuor named a street in Ghana after the former Nigerian President Obasanjo; so which party likes Nigerians more than the other?
Kuffuor named a street in Ghana after the former Nigerian President Obasanjo; so which party likes Nigerians more than the other?
adumtumi nyansfuo 9 years ago
From my experiences being a citizen of the U.S. and a citizen of Ghana. I have spoken to a lot of nigerians, and they tend to favor ndc. They really like jj rawlings. That is just my survey.
From my experiences being a citizen of the U.S. and a citizen of Ghana. I have spoken to a lot of nigerians, and they tend to favor ndc. They really like jj rawlings. That is just my survey.
K. Boateng 9 years ago
your survey lacks empirical evidence but we have an unrefutable and empirical evidence that an NPP president in the person of John Kofi Diawuo Agyekum Kuffuor and his government loved the Nigerians so much so that he named a ... read full comment
your survey lacks empirical evidence but we have an unrefutable and empirical evidence that an NPP president in the person of John Kofi Diawuo Agyekum Kuffuor and his government loved the Nigerians so much so that he named a street in Ghana after a Nigerian president, Obasanjo. Please tell me any NDC president who has named a street in Ghana after any Nigerian president. Thanks.
adumtumi nyansfuo 9 years ago
How is that evidence. Trust me you write like your ignorant. If kuffour names a street after obasanjo. Does not mean that all nigerians will vote npp. Stop writing like your smart, and be humble.
How is that evidence. Trust me you write like your ignorant. If kuffour names a street after obasanjo. Does not mean that all nigerians will vote npp. Stop writing like your smart, and be humble.
K. Boateng 9 years ago
I don't begrudge you for your sheepishness in a discussion by resorting to insults but sitting in your kitchen to conduct your own "survey" and conclude, without any empirical evidence that Nigerians love the NDC, exposes how ... read full comment
I don't begrudge you for your sheepishness in a discussion by resorting to insults but sitting in your kitchen to conduct your own "survey" and conclude, without any empirical evidence that Nigerians love the NDC, exposes how INTELLIGENT you are. At any rate, we have an NPP president naming a street after a Nigerian president and you don't see that as "love" for the other? Anyway,you are very SMART but we don't write like "Stop writing like your smart". Try "you are or "you're" next time, Smarty Pants.
Mr. Figure-Out 9 years ago
It is not true that Nigerians like Rawlings and the NDC. In those days Nigerians used to ridicule and refer to Ghanaians, particularly Trokosis, as dummies for helping to impose Oburoni P3t3 (a useless Whiteman) to rule ove ... read full comment
It is not true that Nigerians like Rawlings and the NDC. In those days Nigerians used to ridicule and refer to Ghanaians, particularly Trokosis, as dummies for helping to impose Oburoni P3t3 (a useless Whiteman) to rule over the putative Black Stars of Africa. In fact Rawlings' era marked the most reprehensible and stupid moments in the annals of post colonial Africa. I cannot Imargin what was happening to the mortal remains of the Afrocentric Kwame Nkrumah in those dark days of our political history after independence.
francis kwarteng 9 years ago
send me an email Mr. Figure-Out (franciskkwarteng@yahoo.com).
send me an email Mr. Figure-Out (franciskkwarteng@yahoo.com).
NPPsupporter 9 years ago
Nana is not like by Many NPP. Nana will not win and cannot win. The3 north does not want Bawamia either. They are all NDC even Mahama's family.
Nana is not like by Many NPP. Nana will not win and cannot win. The3 north does not want Bawamia either. They are all NDC even Mahama's family.
BILLYBILLY 9 years ago
nana or no nana ndc are now known to be thieves so they are going like armed robbers when we vote them out.....
nana or no nana ndc are now known to be thieves so they are going like armed robbers when we vote them out.....
BILLYBILLY 9 years ago
Definitely, Northerners And Voltarians Will Want To Retain Ndc But Central, Brong Ahafo, Western, And Greater Accra Metropolis Will Vote Out Ndc Bcos They Are Not One Way Voters So They Vote According To How Badly Incumbent G ... read full comment
Definitely, Northerners And Voltarians Will Want To Retain Ndc But Central, Brong Ahafo, Western, And Greater Accra Metropolis Will Vote Out Ndc Bcos They Are Not One Way Voters So They Vote According To How Badly Incumbent Govts Perform....Ndc Has Peerformed So Stupidly To Destroy Ghana's Economy So They Are Going Out By All Means In 2016.....So MENSAH OPANIN KWABENA... Get Ready To Eat Back Ur Stupidity Which U Spew Out Daily On The Net....Stupid Foooooooool
yaw, kaneshie 9 years ago
Yoo, thank u very much, u ll see the one way voters but this time around, in a grand style. Your likes are the reasons why your party lose elections and ll continue for a very long time to come
Yoo, thank u very much, u ll see the one way voters but this time around, in a grand style. Your likes are the reasons why your party lose elections and ll continue for a very long time to come
john 9 years ago
If nana win de election den we are dead he will go ahead and implement his ye akanfour policy.please God save us from this wicket tribalistic "yam "
If nana win de election den we are dead he will go ahead and implement his ye akanfour policy.please God save us from this wicket tribalistic "yam "
Hardcore 9 years ago
the Akyem Warlord Akuffo Addo has credibility syndrome, as long as NPP fail to spot on this, then come 2016 there wil be mass suicides among those NPP supporters who refused to see white as white.
the Akyem Warlord Akuffo Addo has credibility syndrome, as long as NPP fail to spot on this, then come 2016 there wil be mass suicides among those NPP supporters who refused to see white as white.
SAMUEL 9 years ago
let us be fair president mahama is not appointed by God that is why ghana is going like this (DUMSOR,DUMSOR)no development everything Basaa.
let us be fair president mahama is not appointed by God that is why ghana is going like this (DUMSOR,DUMSOR)no development everything Basaa.
John 9 years ago
yh nana can win come to Liberia n see hw Ghana peace keepers r going through the money to pay peace keepers is a problem to Ghana United nation pay peace keepers at the operation aera today Ghana government is keeping the ebo ... read full comment
yh nana can win come to Liberia n see hw Ghana peace keepers r going through the money to pay peace keepers is a problem to Ghana United nation pay peace keepers at the operation aera today Ghana government is keeping the ebola allowance so hw can soldiers in Ghana votes maham to be president no we r not
Latif-- Atwima Agogo. 9 years ago
We the Ghanains are not fools to vote for this CORRUPT nd INCOMPETENT leaders again. NPP WILL SURELY COME BACK! God WILL save US WICKED government.
We the Ghanains are not fools to vote for this CORRUPT nd INCOMPETENT leaders again. NPP WILL SURELY COME BACK! God WILL save US WICKED government.
Mahama water in Kyebi 9 years ago
Nana Addo will lose again in 2016
Nana Addo will lose again in 2016
Julor Mahama 9 years ago
Those who are orchestrating the downfall of nana should know they are only curtailing an individual's ambition to prove his worth to mother Ghana. Sadly, this hatred for nana is by and large affecting the entire nation. I can ... read full comment
Those who are orchestrating the downfall of nana should know they are only curtailing an individual's ambition to prove his worth to mother Ghana. Sadly, this hatred for nana is by and large affecting the entire nation. I can't believe Ghanaians are that naive to harm themselves just to displease one person.Ghanaians chose Mahama because he is younger and supposedly handsome but what has this brought to the table? The younger president just as he is inexperienced,has equally appointed inexperienced youth to sensitive positions which is yielding bad results. All they are capable of is stealing and looting. The young president Ghanaians "preferred " is superintending over the demise of NHIS . They young president has orchestrated the looting at SADA simply to ensure his victory. People should know that you can not fool the populace all the time.
The NDC propaganda has reached its decline so much so that when the economy is in distress they turn round to blame it on the redenomination of the cedi, rising structures and dwarfs looting the central vault. They don't see the wanton dissipation of scarce resources through fraudulent judgement debts; they hardly remember that they told Ghanaians NPP had used scarce resources to buy V8 landcruisers,yet today they drive the latest versions costing $150.000.00 .
The underlying criteria for 2016 would be simply how our living conditions stand today. Are we worst of than 8 years ago? YES!
Those who hate nana are the thieves who shiver in front of a nana led administration which would not allow them loot . Even the avowed enemies of Nana Addo know he is not corruptible . Mahama we all know has been accused be Late Mills for inflating the cost of the embrayaer jet. Vigilantee Martin Hamidu is an honest man we all know and did not lie to is.
Ghanaians must remember that their misery has hit crisis level and vote for Mahama will eventually establish Ghana as a failed state in which their children will have no future whiles Mahama and his cohorts fly their kids abroad for the best education.
willy 8 years ago
Npp is winning elections 2016 by approximately 51%
Npp is winning elections 2016 by approximately 51%
Appiah Emmanuel (booboo) 7 years ago
Nana and npp will win 2016 election easily like drinking water because all Ghanaians are crying about the economy that will help nana to win the election
Nana and npp will win 2016 election easily like drinking water because all Ghanaians are crying about the economy that will help nana to win the election
Nana Addo even won 2012 but Atuguba gave it to Mahama. Nana Addo will win 2016 in first round
After all this writer put forward; is this your reply? "Nana Addo even won 2012 but Atuguba gave it to Mahama. Nana Addo will win 2016 in first round" What is assuring you of William Addo fake lawyer victory in 2016? Why can' ...
read full comment
With "Twenty Seven Zero" taken as "270" in favor of looter and thief Mahama? This will never happen again. Nana beat Mahama in the first round and he schemed and bribed to steal the run-off. 2016 is not far off so let's wait ...
read full comment
Author: Kafui Ama
Date: 2009-07-23 01:44:06
Please be patient and read this to the end.
By Craig Murray, former Deputy British High Commisssioner to Ghana | Posted: Tuesday, January 20, 2009
... It was Novembe ...
read full comment
As the Israelites crossed the red sea,so shall nana crossed to victory in 2016.The battle may be tough but it take the mighty hand of God to deliver his children.Ghanaians are suffering with skyrocketing fuel prices.And i wan ...
read full comment
You still believe this nonsense? Akufo Addo will lose again so start your weeping now.
Is this Akan wonnabe really the 'Opanin' that he call himself? His infantile reasoning in this disgusting write up has exposed his stinky black arse as an immature Trokosi reprobate, a fool soldier trying to impress his usel ...
read full comment
No,nana can never be a president,we don't trust him hrh
We don't like him. No way
Nigerians love ndc. There are 2 million plus nigerian citizens holding Ghanaian citizen cards. Ghana is in trouble.
Kuffuor named a street in Ghana after the former Nigerian President Obasanjo; so which party likes Nigerians more than the other?
From my experiences being a citizen of the U.S. and a citizen of Ghana. I have spoken to a lot of nigerians, and they tend to favor ndc. They really like jj rawlings. That is just my survey.
your survey lacks empirical evidence but we have an unrefutable and empirical evidence that an NPP president in the person of John Kofi Diawuo Agyekum Kuffuor and his government loved the Nigerians so much so that he named a ...
read full comment
How is that evidence. Trust me you write like your ignorant. If kuffour names a street after obasanjo. Does not mean that all nigerians will vote npp. Stop writing like your smart, and be humble.
I don't begrudge you for your sheepishness in a discussion by resorting to insults but sitting in your kitchen to conduct your own "survey" and conclude, without any empirical evidence that Nigerians love the NDC, exposes how ...
read full comment
It is not true that Nigerians like Rawlings and the NDC. In those days Nigerians used to ridicule and refer to Ghanaians, particularly Trokosis, as dummies for helping to impose Oburoni P3t3 (a useless Whiteman) to rule ove ...
read full comment
send me an email Mr. Figure-Out (franciskkwarteng@yahoo.com).
Nana is not like by Many NPP. Nana will not win and cannot win. The3 north does not want Bawamia either. They are all NDC even Mahama's family.
nana or no nana ndc are now known to be thieves so they are going like armed robbers when we vote them out.....
Definitely, Northerners And Voltarians Will Want To Retain Ndc But Central, Brong Ahafo, Western, And Greater Accra Metropolis Will Vote Out Ndc Bcos They Are Not One Way Voters So They Vote According To How Badly Incumbent G ...
read full comment
Yoo, thank u very much, u ll see the one way voters but this time around, in a grand style. Your likes are the reasons why your party lose elections and ll continue for a very long time to come
If nana win de election den we are dead he will go ahead and implement his ye akanfour policy.please God save us from this wicket tribalistic "yam "
the Akyem Warlord Akuffo Addo has credibility syndrome, as long as NPP fail to spot on this, then come 2016 there wil be mass suicides among those NPP supporters who refused to see white as white.
let us be fair president mahama is not appointed by God that is why ghana is going like this (DUMSOR,DUMSOR)no development everything Basaa.
yh nana can win come to Liberia n see hw Ghana peace keepers r going through the money to pay peace keepers is a problem to Ghana United nation pay peace keepers at the operation aera today Ghana government is keeping the ebo ...
read full comment
We the Ghanains are not fools to vote for this CORRUPT nd INCOMPETENT leaders again. NPP WILL SURELY COME BACK! God WILL save US WICKED government.
Nana Addo will lose again in 2016
Those who are orchestrating the downfall of nana should know they are only curtailing an individual's ambition to prove his worth to mother Ghana. Sadly, this hatred for nana is by and large affecting the entire nation. I can ...
read full comment
Npp is winning elections 2016 by approximately 51%
Nana and npp will win 2016 election easily like drinking water because all Ghanaians are crying about the economy that will help nana to win the election