Audio By Carbonatix
The Member of Parliament for Kwadaso Constituency in the Ashanti Region, Professor Kingsley Nyarko, has denied allegations that money he offered electoral officers during the Ejisu constituency by-election on Tuesday, April 30, was meant to bribe them.
The incident which was captured on camera, has since Tuesday afternoon when it emerged, been the talk of town, with the Electoral Commission immediately withdrawing the officers involved and handing the matter over to the police for criminal investigation.
In the video, Prof Nyarko is seen engaging in conversations with electoral officers, and at one stage as he moved to another table manned by some of the officers, he fished out a white envelope and offered it to the officers, who were apparently reluctant to take it. Prof Nyarko subsequently dropped the envelope on a table and left.
He has since told Joy FM that the envelope contained money he intended as a favour he was doing the election officials to use for lunch.
He said what he offered them could not be a bribe as he would not have dared to bribe election officials in an open space as happened.
- Read also: Ejisu by-election: NPP MP for Kwadaso, Kingsley Nyarko fingered in alleged electoral malpractice
Professor Nyarko asserted that if he had intended to bribe officials, he wouldn't have done so in a public space.
“If I were to influence them, do you think I will do it in that public space? What I want to put on record is that I did not bribe anybody, I have not influenced anybody to vote or to do anything untoward for my candidate,” he said.
He further argued that individuals were free to interpret the event as they pleased, but his conscience was clear because he couldn't influence EC officials who were "trained, honest, and disciplined to engage in any untoward actions in a public place."
Professor Nyarko clarified that despite the widespread circulation of the video, he did not feel bad because he did nothing wrong. He added that he was aware that many individuals would dwell on the incident and spin it to suit their own narratives.
The legislator emphasised that he was a teacher of high repute and that his track record demonstrates his discipline and integrity.
Again, he said he will avail himself for investigations if the need be.
When questioned about his relationship with the EC officials that led to him handing them the envelope, he said, “So if I see you, do I have to know you before I do you a favour? .... So there should not be any relationship before [handing an envelop]. I have not influenced anybody negatively to turn the people in a certain direction.”
Meanwhile, he was optimistic that his candidate, Kwabena Boateng of the New Patriotic Party, would win convincingly.
Latest Stories
-
E-mobility project explores solutions for healthcare delivery and climate resilience
17 seconds -
Middle East Conflict: Time to save multilateralism, not deepen unilateralism — Security Analyst
2 minutes -
Former US diplomat sentenced to life for abusing two girls in Burkina Faso
2 minutes -
Rethinking institutional vitality at SSNIT
6 minutes -
Holy Child College of Education marks 80 years excellence in teacher education
9 minutes -
Kente must evolve from occasion cloth to design economy powerhouse
16 minutes -
West African content creators pledge to combat commercialisation of disinformation
18 minutes -
Delta names Matt Long as Managing Director, Alliances – Europe & Africa
21 minutes -
Climate-smart charcoal: Reinventing a household fuel
21 minutes -
100 additional courts to be connected to ADR – Justice Mensah-Homiah
26 minutes -
Presidential Wardrobe: Mahama’s repeated smock at SONA – coincidence or a statement?
28 minutes -
New Black Stars Technical Staff not on salaries – Sports Minister
32 minutes -
Middle East conflict could spark new wave of global terrorism – Security analyst warns
35 minutes -
Government introduces 20% salary top-up for rural teachers under ‘Teacher Dabre’ Initiative
36 minutes -
US/Israel–Iran conflict could hit Ghana’s economy — Prof Antwi-Danso
41 minutes
