The Minister-designate for Communication and Digitization, Ursula Owusu-Ekuful has described sitting on her fellow legislator Kwabena Mintah Akandoh during the dissolution of the 7th Parliament as using physical restraint to subdue him.
Her comment is with reference to the incident that happened in the Chamber of Parliament during the early hours of Wednesday, January 7, 2020 during the election of a new Speaker of Parliament.
As part of the events of that day, MPs of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) in Parliament occupied the seats meant for their colleagues on the other side of the aisle, creating confusion in the House when the NPP MPs came in.
According to Madam Owusu, the Juaboso MP had occupied her seat after she took a trip to the bathroom and refused to vacate her seat even when she had returned.
His refusal to vacate her seat, according to her, left her with limited options, of which sitting on his lap was the preferred choice under the circumstances. This, however, was in defiance of his decision to occupy her seat and as a means to subdue him from pushing her off and causing any "unintended consequences" to himself.
“After all the excitement of that day, I didn’t want to be party to such a thing. But I did need to sit down. So I sat in the chair that I was occupying before I went to the washroom, which he happened to be sitting on. When I sat down, he started trying to shake me off and was moving back and forth before he quickly realized that it would have unintended consequences that would not be good for him.
"And so he quickly stopped and froze. And at that point, I decided to restrain him from causing any further damage to himself,” the MP designate for Communication and Digitization explained.
"I used physical restraint to subdue him. So it was a physical restraint to subdue an obstreperous adult," she stated emphatically.
She also noted that that in her experience "even when there are seats available, the gentlemen get up to offer their seats to ladies who may not have a seat in the house. They do not leave the chair that they are sitting on to come and occupy the seat that the lady is sitting on."
As such, in her opinion, it was evident that Mr Akandoh - whose seat was empty - was "hoping to provoke an incident" when he decided to occupy her seat even after she had returned from the washroom.
Latest Stories
-
“Restrain him!” – Afenyo-Markin clashes with Dafeamekpor at vetting session
13 seconds -
One dead, over 500 displaced in Kasoa after downpour
5 minutes -
Lawra SHS accident: Surviving students receiving psychological support – GES
14 minutes -
Standard Chartered employees commit to mentoring persons with disabilities, setting them on the path to employability
32 minutes -
Gov’t to start poultry project with 4 million birds for 50 large-scale farmers
38 minutes -
Fire guts Lucky Herbal Centre at Kasoa
39 minutes -
Uganda leader signs new law allowing military trials for civilians
39 minutes -
Justice Dzamefe’s position on succession during Presidential ‘vaccum’ sparks debate
44 minutes -
Obuasi continues to experience outages as damaged transformers are yet to be replaced
45 minutes -
Zoomlion’s Director of communication explains why sweepers are paid GH₵258
49 minutes -
We need virtual courts – Justice Dzamefe
52 minutes -
GJA Elections: Ghana Chamber of Mines CEO backs Albert Dwumfour’s re-election bid
2 hours -
Ghana forward Ibrahim Mustapha returns to Serbia with FK Vojvodina
2 hours -
ECG pilots new smart prepaid meters in Ahenema Kokoben operation district
2 hours -
Minority MPs urge safety measures for Ghanaians in Iran
2 hours