Audio By Carbonatix
Anti-corruption campaigners are calling for decisive action against any semblance of vote-buying in the upcoming 7 December general election.
This follows an incident where the incumbent Member of Parliament (MP) for Ayawaso West Wuogon, Lydia Alhassan, was seen distributing food to voters lined up during Monday’s special voting exercise.
Despite a video capturing the MP in the act, she denied in subsequent interviews with journalists ever engaging in such conduct.
“I wasn’t here. I don’t know if you saw me here. I came here before 6 a.m. and left a few minutes ago. I don’t even know what you’re talking about. I am yet to find out from them what happened,” she stated.
However, an anti-corruption campaigner and Co-Chair of the Citizen Movement Against Corruption argued that both the MP and the recipients of the items should have been apprehended by state authorities and investigated.
Edem Senanu said that with video evidence of the distribution, both those distributing and those receiving the items are persons of interest.
He questioned whether the Inter-Agency Security Task Force could swiftly identify and summon such individuals for questioning.
“The sooner we do that, the better because it sets the tone that people cannot, with impunity, distribute and receive food while pretending we are conducting transparent, fair elections,” he said.
Mr Senanu stressed the urgency of investigating the matter, especially with only a few days remaining until the 7 December election.
“The OSP [Office of the Special Prosecutor] ought to demonstrate, within the next 48 hours, that the footage has been reviewed, persons identified, summoned, and conclusions drawn, with appropriate follow-up actions taken,” he added.
Meanwhile, the Electoral Commission (EC) has warned its staff against accepting food or any similar items from political parties or candidates.
In the Ayawaso Central constituency, both National Democratic Congress (NDC) and New Patriotic Party (NPP) representatives were seen distributing food, not to voters but to electoral officials.
The presiding officer at the polling centre made it clear that EC instructions explicitly prohibit accepting items from political parties or candidates.
“It’s never right. So, we told our officials: when they give you food, collect it and put it aside. If you take it and something happens to you, the EC and you will both face consequences,” the officer explained.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana Water MD urges public to report construction activities disrupting water supply
11 minutes -
Ghana Water unable to fund major projects due to financial constraints — Adam Mutawakilu
22 minutes -
PPAG raises alarm over lack of sign language interpreters in public, private institutions
30 minutes -
Black Stars ‘disastrous’ AFCON 2023 campaign didn’t surprise me – Kurt Okraku
32 minutes -
Empower state agencies to work effectively to fight corruption – GACC
32 minutes -
Blood, betrayal and the bill: Ghana’s paternity crossroads
44 minutes -
Asiedu Nketia rejects Ministry of Interior report on 2024 election death
50 minutes -
Russian national extradition bid forces a moment of truth for Ghanaian privacy laws
55 minutes -
African Union wraps historic summit with reparations mandate and global reform ultimatum
1 hour -
US Embassy releases 1,000 visa slots in Accra
1 hour -
‘One of the greatest actors we ever had’: Hollywood mourns Robert Duvall
1 hour -
The Great African Divergence: Why the dream of a borderless Africa is a dangerous premature reality
2 hours -
Association of Banks CEO hails “unpalatable” decision to save COCOBOD from collapse
2 hours -
New nuclear talks between US and Iran begin in Geneva
2 hours -
Why “good enough” is destroying Ghana’s fashion manufacturing future
2 hours
