Audio By Carbonatix
The National Democratic Congress (NDC) has expressed ongoing concerns about the electoral processes leading up to Ghana’s 2024 general elections.
The party has already raised several issues regarding the country’s provisional electoral roll. Tensions are rising as the opposition party cites a lack of trust in the Electoral Commission (EC), the killing of some Ghanaians during the 2020 election, and other unresolved matters as obstacles to signing a peace pact with the National Peace Council.
Ahead of the crucial Inter-Party Advisory Committee (IPAC) meeting, the sub-regional body ECOWAS is conducting a mediation meeting with all stakeholders in partnership with the National Peace Council.
Speaking to JoyNews, Executive Secretary of the National Peace Council, George Amoh, urged the NDC to embrace dialogue to address their concerns. He added that the recent court ruling on the 2020 post-election violence indicates progress towards reaching an agreement on the peace pact.
“We will do everything within our mandate to address any outstanding differences before the December elections, and we are hopeful that all parties will agree to sign the peace pact. Negotiation, mediation, and dialogue have always been enduring mechanisms for resolving differences, and we want to encourage that.”
In an interview with JoyNews, a leading member of the National Democratic Congress, Kakra Essamuah expressed concerns about the Electoral Commission (EC) as the December elections approach. They are hopeful that the upcoming emergency meeting with the EC will lead to a positive outcome.
Mr Essamuah stated that signing the peace pact alone does not guarantee peace; rather, peace is achieved through justice. He also noted that the NDC remains dissatisfied with the electoral violence that occurred in 2020 and insists that those responsible must be held accountable.
“We need peace and must work very hard for it, but we cannot achieve peace merely by signing a document.”
The UN Resident Coordinator for Ghana, Charles Abani, is urging all political parties to reach a consensus and commit to signing the peace pact before the December elections.
Speaking at the ITU-INTERPOL Regional Cybersecurity Drill for Africa in Accra, Mr Abani emphasised that the peace pact is a crucial indicator of their intention to conduct a peaceful and successful election.
“It is important to urge all parties to find the necessary compromise, conversation, and pragmatism to ensure that we have the peace pact signed. I know that many actors support this, and I am confident that all parties will come to the table when the time is right.”
Latest Stories
-
2026 World Cup: ‘Stingy’ Black Stars should be generous for ‘spiritual backing’ – Prince Tagoe
1 minute -
Justice, Divine Jailbreaks & The Republic’s Headache
2 minutes -
‘We are ever ready to host the 2026 WAFCON if Morocco is not’ – South Africa Sports Minister
4 minutes -
National Service Authority moves to resolve staff concerns over flagged payment records
12 minutes -
AICL workers urge gov’t to fast-track talks with Hong Kong Investor to revive former ATL
17 minutes -
Ho teaching hospital sees off Dr. John Tampouri, Dr. John Korbuvi into retirement
35 minutes -
Ghana’s inflation drops to 3.3% in February, lowest since 2021 rebasing
38 minutes -
CAF to announce 2026 WAFCON decision in 48 hours
46 minutes -
The messaging crisis behind vote selling in Ghana
58 minutes -
First US soldiers to die in Iran conflict are identified
1 hour -
11 injured in head-on collision on Cape Coast-Takoradi Highway
1 hour -
‘This is the best I have seen the team play’ – Bjorkegren praises Black Queens win over Russia
1 hour -
ECOWAS Commission slot traded for AU Chairmanship — Nana Asafo-Adjei Ayeh alleges
1 hour -
GH¢1.5bn in assets frozen under ORAL – Kwakye Ofosu reveals
1 hour -
Aggrey Memorial Alumni reject Central regional Police Command account of alleged assault
1 hour
