Audio By Carbonatix
A law lecturer at the University of Ghana, Professor Kwadwo Appiagyei-Atua, has criticised the Minority in Parliament for what he described as an overly dramatic protest against the continued detention of Bernard Antwi Boasiako, popularly known as Chairman Wontumi, the Ashanti Regional Chairman of the New Patriotic Party (NPP).
The protest followed Wontumi’s arrest by the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) on Tuesday, May 27.
Chairman Wontumi was initially detained by the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the police before EOCO also held him over other allegations.
Although he was granted bail in the sum of GH¢50 million on Wednesday, May 28, with conditions including two verified sureties, his release has been delayed due to a pending High Court application seeking to review the bail terms. Despite meeting the bail conditions by May 30, the legal process has yet to conclude.
On Thursday, May 29, Minority MPs staged a walkout from Parliament. They later marched to the EOCO headquarters, where they staged a sit-down protest demanding Wontumi’s immediate release on self-recognisance bail, citing his public profile and low flight risk.
However, Professor Appiagyei-Atua, speaking on Channel One TV on Saturday, May 31, dismissed the protest as unnecessary and politically motivated.
“One would have expected that the NPP team would have followed the due process, and that is why I fault the steps they took—leaving Parliament to go and sit down on the floor at EOCO,” he said.
“I think it was needless, just to create some drama and attention, which in the end could have led to lawlessness. Indeed, some lawlessness occurred, considering that a journalist was assaulted. The whole thing was overdramatised,” he added.
He also expressed disappointment that some of the protesting MPs, many of who are lawyers, appeared to have ignored legal protocols in favour of public theatrics.
“Some of these MPs are lawyers, they know the rules, and I don’t know why this time they decided to choose this route, which creates the perception that they want to politicise the situation,” he remarked.
Latest Stories
-
CAF dismisses Morocco protest to strip Senegal of AFCON title for misconduct during final
20 minutes -
I almost lost hope along the way – Matthew Nyindam
29 minutes -
The womb and the field: How colonialism turned African women into permanent infrastructure
32 minutes -
Banks have started calling customers for loans, says BoG Governor
48 minutes -
Bawumia promises ‘10 appointments per constituency’ under prospective NPP gov’t
51 minutes -
Bawumia leads NPP flagbearer race with clear majority – Global InfoAnalytics
58 minutes -
Government allocates over 34% of budget to education
1 hour -
AfCFTA is the most ambitious integration project ever in Africa’s history – Mahama
1 hour -
I had nobody to speak for me, but God – Nyindam on legal battle for Kpandai seat
1 hour -
I was prepared for any outcome – Nyindam after Supreme Court judgement
2 hours -
The model who moved to Ghana and wrapped her prosthetic leg in its famous fabric
2 hours -
Rwanda seeks £100m from UK over axed asylum deal
2 hours -
Ex-Nigerian minister in bribery trial went on spending sprees, court hears
3 hours -
My God has spoken – Kpandai MP Nyindam after Supreme Court restores seat
3 hours -
For one year I’ve never had peace to work – Kpandai MP after Supreme Court victory
3 hours
