Audio By Carbonatix
Former President Jerry Rawlings has backed cries of concern following the deployment of military and other security personnel to border towns in the Volta and Oti regions.
In a statement, Mr. Rawlings said the move by government is “generating animosity especially amongst innocent citizens whose basic way of life is being disrupted.”
“The deployment along the borders at peacetime especially at this particular point in time has created so much suspicion and will call for a lot of intelligent flexibility and diligence,” he added.
The said suspicions arise from the upcoming voters’ register compilation which starts on Tuesday.
With the Volta and Oti regions fetching the opposition NDC a chunk of their votes, the party is crying foul over voter suppression.
The NDC says the government is using the military to intimidate residents in these towns from registering to vote in December.
Governing New Patriotic Party MP K.T. Hammond lends credence to this.
According to the lawmaker from Adansi Asokwa, the troops are to ensure foreigners to not get to register to vote in Ghana’s elections.
However, Volta Regional Minister Archibald Letsa and the Interior Minister Ambrose Dery dispute this.
The two Ministers say the troops are merely there to enforce the border closure as part of measures to control the importation of Covid-19 into the country.
But Rawlings says “the Covid-19 restrictions have created enough difficulties for most of our citizens.
“Let us not make it worse with overbearing and intimidating behaviour towards our border dwellers whose livelihood solely depend on activities along the border.”
“Ahead of the voter registration exercise and the December elections, it is important that we demonstrate a sense of fairness and justice to all individuals and groups of people whilst maintaining the integrity and the sanctity of the process,” he added.
Latest Stories
-
Anthropic suspends new AI tools over US government security concerns
7 minutes -
New Somanya Methodist JHS to get major facelift
12 minutes -
KNUST, NADMO begin dredging works after assessment reveals blocked stream and wetland encroachment
28 minutes -
Ghanaian Mecca pilgrims back home after 2026 Hajj
1 hour -
Stakeholders unite in Ahafo Region to flash red card against child labour
1 hour -
Royal Family watch Red Arrows flypast on palace balcony
1 hour -
NAB Consulting announces completion of €250m structured finance facility for Niger
1 hour -
UG Vice Chancellor leads global push for better representation of African languages in AI revolution
1 hour -
World Vision partners Wa East Assembly to launch Children’s Parliament against child labour
2 hours -
Israel carries out air strikes on Lebanon, state media says, as Iran claims deal with US near
2 hours -
Nursing trainee hospitalised after fire rips through female dormitory at Government Secretarial School
2 hours -
New study identifies key reforms needed for sustainable community mining
2 hours -
Prince Adu-Owusu: The beauty of being chosen
2 hours -
Mason dies after falling into well during construction work in Abura Dunkwa
2 hours -
Missing traditional healer found unconscious in a bush after three-day search
2 hours