Audio By Carbonatix
Former President J. J. Rawlings has described as 'spurious' suggestions that his decision to register for the Ghana Card is a call for the Minority in Parliament to follow suit.
A press release Wednesday signed by Kobina Andoh Amoakwa, Communications Director for Mr Rawlings said, 'the principle of Ghana having a valid Identity Card System is what the former President is committed to.'
Mr Rawlings going through the registration process
The statement which was released 24 hours after Mr Rawlings had registered for the Ghana Card added that 'he respects positions taken to ensure that the process is transparent and easily accessible to all.'
The former President urged all stakeholders, especially the National Identification Authority (NIA) and both the Minority and Majority caucuses in Parliament to deliberate dispassionately on the concerns raised so far.
Video: Former President Kufuor backs Minority’s call for inclusion of Voter ID Card
Mr Rawlings believe many of the concerns are legitimate, so they should be re-examined 'in a bid to bring sanity into our democratic process and ensure that all eligible Ghanaians benefit from the process.'
Below is the statement.
Rawlings urges stakeholders to re-examine national ID Card concerns
The attention of the office of His Excellency Jerry John Rawlings has been drawn to publications in sections of the media and on social media platforms insinuating that his decision to register for the National Identity card was a call to members of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) to disregard the position taken by the party and the minority in Parliament.
The office wishes to state that it is spurious to suggest that former President Rawlings made a call against the minority or the party.
The principle of Ghana having a valid Identity Card System is what the former President is committed to and he respects positions taken to ensure that the process is transparent and easily accessible to all.
The former President urges all stakeholders, especially the National Identification Authority and both the Minority and Majority caucuses in Parliament to deliberate dispassionately on the concerns, many of which are legitimate, in a bid to bring sanity into our democratic process and ensure that all eligible Ghanaians benefit from the process.
Latest Stories
-
Gov’t is losing the case against Wontumi – NPP’s Awal Mohammed
14 minutes -
George Addo Jnr returns as lead english commentator for official AFCON broadcast rights holders
43 minutes -
Nigerian aircraft and crew detained by Burkina Faso released
47 minutes -
Bright Simons rises as key figure in evidence-driven public policy in Africa
50 minutes -
Seven arrested in Cape Coast anti-drug swoop, Police seize narcotics and gaming machines
56 minutes -
From fever to football: Lessons on celebrity culture and child development
1 hour -
CSOs acting as lobbyists, not public watchdogs – NPP’s Awal Mohammed
2 hours -
Ghanaian soldiers touch down in Jamaica to support Hurricane Melissa recovery efforts
2 hours -
Police arrest 4, seize drugs and illegal gaming machines in Paga operation
2 hours -
Former deputy A-G says 1931 extradition treaty with US is outdated
2 hours -
Any prosecutor who files 78 charges is not serious — Kofi Bentil on Ofori‑Atta Case
2 hours -
CPP’s Ghanamannti slams L.I. revocation on illegal mining
2 hours -
Prosecution strategy against Ofori-Atta likely to fail – Kofi Bentil
2 hours -
It will be a small miracle to extradite Ken Ofori-Atta — Kofi Bentil
2 hours -
Ofori-Atta could claim political bias in extradition proceedings — Prof. Appiagyei-Atua
3 hours
