
Audio By Carbonatix
The flagbearer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), John Dramani Mahama, has cautioned that commitments to peace ahead of the 2024 elections risk being rendered meaningless without sincerity and trust among stakeholders.
Speaking on the importance of peace-building at the signing of the peace pact event, Mr Mahama expressed concerns about the practical impact of signing peace agreements.
He stressed that such pacts, though well-intentioned, could fail without concrete actions to ensure lasting peace.
“There is reason to be concerned that the signing of this pact though well-intentioned, could amount to nothing if not followed by concrete actions to guarantee the peace by the stakeholders and government,” he stated on Thursday, November 28.
Mr Mahama highlighted the gap between declarations of peace and actions that undermine them, particularly by those in authority.
“It is all well and good for us to commit to peace and recite beautiful platitudes. However, all efforts to build peace before, during, and after the 2024 elections would be futile if mistrust and insincerity persist. Mistrust arises when there is a disconnect between words and actions, compounded by gaslighting from those in authority,” he added.
According to him, events and happenings during the last election in 2020 and the Ayawaso West Wuogon by-election create considerable doubts about the genuineness of some of the commitments to be made.
“We all recall the appalling spectacle of masked men acting on the orders of operatives of the government, shooting indiscriminately at innocent Ghanaians going about their legitimate electoral activity during that by-election. Some of the victims of that shooting incident remain incapacitated till now.
He added that the refusal by the government to act on the recommendations of the Emile Short Commission does not inspire confidence in Ghanaians that the government truly believes in peace.
He went on to say that “the inaction of the government to in the face of the murder of the eight of our citizens during the last election cast a shadow of doubt on government commitment to maintain the peace. How are we to believe that such killings would not reoccur?” he asked.
Latest Stories
-
We are focused on engineering low interest rate regime – BoG Governor assures
2 minutes -
How Sporting hero Gyokeres could end European run
8 minutes -
The attack on Ghanaian traders in Burkina Faso and the blame game: Why Hybrid Security Governance Holds the Key (II)
9 minutes -
Bayern face waiting game on ‘very special’ Kane
18 minutes -
The Problem with Nutrition Advice on Social Media – Lessons from a study among University Students
26 minutes -
Arteta calls for perspective as Arsenal look to avoid slump
34 minutes -
Kasoa Old Market traders given final eviction notice ahead of redevelopment
38 minutes -
GH¢15 sachet water price is a ceiling, not fixed – Producers clarify
42 minutes -
Morocco reports 7% rise in first-quarter tourist arrivals
44 minutes -
Calm returns to Adjen Kotoku Market following onion traders’ clash
45 minutes -
One dead, six in critical condition in Gomoa Fetteh accident
47 minutes -
GNFS responds to multi-vehicle crash at Ayi Mensah, urges caution
51 minutes -
Kaneshie footbridge closure raises safety concerns as pedestrians demand urgent repairs
54 minutes -
Clock ticks on Trump’s Iran ultimatum with little sign of breakthrough
55 minutes -
Be value creators for national development – KGL boss challenges private sector
1 hour