Audio By Carbonatix
A #FixTheCountry protester in Sekondi in the Western says he and others joined the demonstration to drum home to present and past governments that Ghanaians deserve better.
"We want the leadership to know that we are tired of substandard governance and leadership, governments that have no plan and directionless leadership," he told JoyNews' Ina-Thalia Quansah.
He said in the last three decades, the youth have experienced nothing but governance that leaves more to be desired.
"We are telling them [political leadership] that we have had enough of the political pettiness such as National Democratic Congress (NDC) government not continuing the project of its predecessor New Patriotic Party (NPP) government and vice versa," he said.

Lead by social media activists, the protest, which started on social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and WhatsApp, has been highlighting economic problems and government mismanagement.

After several back and forth with the Ghana Police Service, the activists and their supporters marched in Accra on August 4, against President Nana Akufo-Addo’s government.

Dressed in red and black and chanting patriotic songs, protesters waved placards declaring “corruption breeds poverty” and “fix our education system now” as they marched in the city centre.

“Nana Akufo-Addo, we’re suffering. Do something for us. Nothing is working,” were the words of one of the protesters in Accra.
“The government must wake up,” another demonstrator said.

The demonstration was the most recent anti-government protest since March when a top court dismissed the main opposition party’s challenge to Akufo-Addo’s re-election late last year.

One of the conveners of the campaign, Oliver Barker Vormawor, said after the Accra demonstration that they will take the drive to other regions including the Ashanti, Western, Volta and Northern.

The Western region protestors said they are asking for the same thing every Ghanaian wants: to fix the system.
"It cannot be that the region we exploit oil from does not have much in terms of infrastructure to boast of...when you walk around you see the level of hopelessness in the eyes of the youth. They do not have jobs and there is an issue of insecurity that we want to be fixed," the protester said.
Latest Stories
-
AU’s 10-year reparations agenda is essential to address historic injustices – Spio-Garbrah
4 minutes -
Ghana can’t remain vulnerable to global economic disruptions— Dr Tutu-Boahene
18 minutes -
‘No nepotism’ – Former NSA Board Chairman demands world-class coach after Otto Addo exit
22 minutes -
Volta Region seen as top choice for luxury weekend breaks — V. L. K. Djokoto
32 minutes -
Halt small-scale mining for one year to fight galamsey – Hopeson Adorye
36 minutes -
President Mahama orders full probe into ‘Big Push’ procurement exposé
54 minutes -
Weija-Gbawe MP calls for commissioning of Weija paediatric hospital
1 hour -
Ghanaians dying in Russia–Ukraine war: The danger is real
1 hour -
Player ratings: Oppong earns high marks as Sibo and Adjetey draw low scores in Germany defeat
1 hour -
Pres. Mahama pledges action on 1.2m out-of-school children after School for Life raises concern
1 hour -
Suhum MP vows NPP will probe Gold-for-Reserves in 2029
2 hours -
Ghana to host Zimbabwe’s President Mnangagwa on three-day state visit
2 hours -
Ghana pushes for stronger West African blue economy partnership at Liberia fisheries investment conference
2 hours -
Ghana hosts high-level African climate strategy meeting ahead of COP31 and COP32
2 hours -
Today’s Front pages : Tuesday, March 31, 2026
2 hours
