Audio By Carbonatix
Having failed to successfully file his nomination forms to contest the December elections, Mr. Dan Lartey, flag-bearer of the Great Consolidated Popular Party (GCPP), is nursing the idea of dragging Ghana’s Electoral Commission to court for “deliberately” rejecting his nomination.
He told Joy News he hoped the EC would be compelled by the court to rescind the decision to disqualify him from contesting for the presidential position.
“I spoke to Dr. Afari Gyan and he said if the court instructs him he will comply; so in other words he was leading me to the court; if there is a procedure to go through in which he will comply, then why not?”
Mr. Lartey was disqualified along with two other presidential candidates – Prophet Daniel Nkansah of the New Vision Party and Richard Nixon Tetteh, an independent candidate, - for presenting incomplete nomination forms.
Mr. Lartey accused the EC of “deliberately saying there was a mistake in the form” he presented on Friday 17, 2008, the final day for submission of nomination forms.
He told Joy News' Sammy Darko in an interview that since the EC had refused to take a second look at his case, he had no option but to go to court.
Asked if it was not too late since balloting had been completed, he retorted; “It doesn’t matter if they have balloted…if I am put at zero (position) or whatever it is, and I am on the line for election that is alright”.
Asked if he really meant business, Mr. Lartey reiterated; “If it is the process to be able to settle the matter why not?”
However, he could not readily tell when he was going to initiate the court action.
Mr. Lartey, 82, has no dream of retiring from politics. “A human being who is alive and not dead, how can he retire from politics? Until the bones are rotten,” die-hard Uncle Dan philosophized.
He said Ghana has a lot of problems in the country and he is the only person with the “methods and way” to solve them.
Meanwhile, Ms. Anna Bossman, acting Commissioner of the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice has said Mr. Dan Lartey has no case going to court.
“I doubt it, I am not sure what his contention is. I don’t see what his problem is,” she told the Accra Daily Mail.
Story by Isaac Essel
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana hosts ICC Men’s T20 World Cup Africa qualifiers at Achimota Oval
2 hours -
Ghana open T20 World Cup qualifiers with emphatic win over Seychelles
2 hours -
SIGA’s dilemma: How public companies became public liabilities
2 hours -
US is ‘normalising’ the erasure of black history, says Mahama in New York
2 hours -
Journalists at Australia’s national broadcaster begin 24-hour strike over pay
2 hours -
Kenya Airways posts $138m pre-tax loss in 2025
3 hours -
Social media bans and digital curfews to be trialled on UK teenagers
3 hours -
Premier League great Salah will leave lifetime of memories
3 hours -
Libya’s El Feel oilfield in shutdown since Thursday, engineers say
3 hours -
Minority caucus oppose gov’t plans to downgrade Suame Interchange; cites secured funding
4 hours -
Oil traders bet millions minutes before Trump’s Iran talks post
5 hours -
Fortnite-maker Epic Games lays off 1,000 more staff
5 hours -
Philippines declares energy emergency over Iran conflict
5 hours -
China dials back on fuel price hikes to ‘reduce burden’ on drivers
5 hours -
Elon Musk’s Starlink blocked from operating in Namibia
5 hours
