Author's note: This piece was written on 19/12/2012. It is being posted today because I was unable to do so at the time.
Law courts in Ghana neither allow radio broadcasts nor the telecasting of their proceedings.
It is typical of some of those around Nana Addo Danquah Akufo-Addo, who
feel that somehow societal rules and regulations don't apply to them,
that the farcical demand is being made that proceedings of the New
Patriotic Party's Supreme Court challenge of the Electoral
Commissioner's declaration of the results of the December 7th 2012
presidential election, ought to be covered live by radio and television
stations.
The way those too-clever-by-half individuals from whom the idea
originates are couching their absurd demand, illustrates perfectly how
they have turned the cloaking of self-serving self-interest with
high-minded principle, into a fine art.
Naturally, the last thing that those who thought that
Alice-in-wonderland type of promises could win them political power
want, is for a return to normalcy in Ghana - after the presidential
election they are disputing.
They are keenly aware that they risk becoming irrelevant, if Ghanaians
return to everyday life again, after the election of a new president.
The strategy therefore is to make the Electoral Commissioner's
declaration of the election of a new president appear to be
illegitimate.
To that end, they must make sure that the arena in which what the
Electoral Commissioner, Dr. Afari-Gyan, insists, and is adamant, are
"false" claims - that the election in which millions of eagle-eyed
Ghanaians (and who was more vigilant than the party of Kennedy Adjapong
& Co., I ask?) watched polling station vote-counting (in all 26,000
polling centres) to ensure that no one stole the election - is heard,
becomes the cynosure of the nation's eyes.
That will doubtless enable them maintain an atmosphere of continued
uncertainty and tension in Ghana, and serve their purposes perfectly:
give their "false" (the Electoral Commissioner's choice of word not
mine) claims an aura of respectability and genuineness in the minds of
ordinary people in Ghana.
The added bonus for them, is that if anyone who is a stickler for due
process and the rule of law opposes the suggestion, on principle, the
impression is immediately created that or he or she is afraid of the
'truth' that they want hidden from Ghanaians, from coming out into the
open.
Well, they must not be given an opportunity to play to the gallery for
their political benefit - and cause an upheaval in the process.
It will not happen - no matter how principled and high-minded they couch
the language used to try and justify something that court rules in the
Republic of Ghana expressly prohibit.
An exception cannot be made under any circumstances - if all are truly
equal before the law. Court proceedings can neither be filmed nor
recorded for broadcasting or telecasting in Ghana. Period.
An exception cannot be made, simply because those who think they are
masters of the universe, believe it will serve the dubious ends they
seek.
Tel: 027 745 3109.
Email: peakofi.thompson@gmail.com
Tuesday, 8 January 2013
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