
Audio By Carbonatix
The Presidential Elections Committee of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) has officially handed over the security of Saturday's crucial presidential primary to the Ghana Police Service, issuing a stern warning that no private or unauthorised security arrangements will be tolerated at any polling station.
The directive was contained in a high-level briefing submitted by the Chairman of the Elections Committee, Joseph Osei-Owusu, to the National Executive Committee (NEC) on Friday, January 30, 2026.
The move is designed to ensure a peaceful environment for the election of a flagbearer to lead the party in the 2028 general elections.
Exclusive Police Jurisdiction
In a move to prevent the militarisation of polling centres and avoid institutional friction, the Committee clarified that the state security apparatus has been granted absolute authority over the D-Day proceedings.
This follows concerns raised during previous internal elections regarding the presence of private ‘macho men’, vigilantes and unauthorised security details.
“We have informed all party faithful, sympathisers, stakeholders, the Presidential Candidates, and the public that the Ghana Police Service has been granted exclusive jurisdiction over the D-day election security,” the Committee stated. “No private or unauthorised security arrangements will be permitted at any voting centre.”
The Roadmap to Transparency
Mr Osei-Owusu noted that the Committee held final consultations with all presidential aspirants to finalise the operational guidelines and provide firm assurances of transparency.
Access to the inner voting perimeters will be strictly regulated.
Only delegates, electoral officials, and accredited agents representing the presidential aspirants will be permitted within the security cordon.
All other individuals, including high-ranking party supporters not serving as agents, are required to remain outside the designated zones.
A Critical Milestone for 2028
The January 31 primary is seen as an existential test for the NPP's unity agenda.
The Election Committee’s briefing emphasised that the roadmap has been mutually agreed upon to prevent post-election disputes.
With the D-Day protocols finalised, the NPP now moves into the final hours before its delegates decide the face of the party for the next four years.
Latest Stories
-
Oil prices fall 1% to 4-month lows as progress in US-Iran talks cools supply concerns
2 hours -
Mass school kidnappings in Nigeria in recent years
2 hours -
Uganda finds isolated Marburg virus case, Africa CDC says
2 hours -
Kenyan court charges eight schoolgirls with their fellow students’ murder
3 hours -
Google has exceeded $1 billion Africa investment target
3 hours -
Floods in Ivory Coast kill 59 people, government says
3 hours -
Over 900 arrested during South African anti-migrant protests
3 hours -
Communications Ministry orders Ghana Digital Centres to reverse staff suspension after floods
3 hours -
Canada to make Eurovision Song Contest debut in 2027
3 hours -
One killed after truck carrying fish runs into pedestrians at Winneba
3 hours -
Egypt optimistic Salah will be fit to face Australia
3 hours -
Absa Bank Ghana relocates head office to new Ridge headquarters
4 hours -
3 arrested in Bolgatanga for trafficking girls into prostitution
4 hours -
Concern over rise in online racist abuse at World Cup
4 hours -
Controversial bishops ordained as Pope warns of ‘schism’ in Catholic Church
4 hours