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Residents of Kumasi and other parts
of the country woke up on Sunday morning to witness fresh 2012 election
posters of Nana Konadu Agyeman Rawlings, wife of former president and
NDC founder, Jerry John Rawlings, scattered all over the country.
The
posters, which were nicely made by experts in the designing business,
had a huge smiling portrait of Nana Konadu, wearing a head gear in
National Democratic Congress (NDC) colours.
It had the
inscription ‘Vote Nana Konadu Agyeman Rawlings for President 2012’
boldly written under an umbrella decorated in NDC colours at the left
side.
Other inscriptions on the posters which had already started
creating hullabaloo in political circles in Kumasi included “Come and
redeem us”, NDC is dying slowly”, “Grassroots need you” and “Still be
bold”. The posters were found firmly pasted on walls and road sides
at the Asafo Interchange, on walls of buildings at Adum, the central
business district of Kumasi.
Reports reaching Daily Guide
indicate that the Konadu posters were also pasted on walls at some parts
of the Garden City including Bantama, Krofrom and other places. The
posters could also be found at Asylum Down and High Streets in Accra.
Though
the posters did not have NDC written on them, they had the colours of
the ruling political party dominating the upper part, which would make a
person seeing it for the first time think the candidate was contesting
the 2012 polls on the ticket of the NDC. The controversial Nana
Konadu posters also had the Ghana flag appearing on the right side of it
in the background which tended to give it a national inclination.
Political
pundits in Kumasi were however not treating the posters matter with
kids’ gloves, as they had started reading meanings into it.
Those
that spoke to Daily Guide on anonymity noted that the posters might
mean that Nana Konadu would after all contest the 2012 polls as an
independent candidate.
Nana Konadu, it would be recalled,
contested President John Evans Atta Mills for the NDC presidential slot
and lost in last year’s congress of the party in Sunayni.
Sometime
ago, a similar poster of Nana Konadu indicating her intentions of
contesting the NDC presidential congress polls hit Kumasi and other
parts of the country, with party gurus dismissing it as a ruse until the
former First Lady finally announced her candidature for the NDC race.
Just like the present posters, no group claimed responsibility for the then Nana Konadu posters, creating room for speculations. Meanwhile,
Daily Guide has gathered that the Ashanti Regional NDC has been hit
with fear and anguish following the emergence of the Nana Konadu
election 2012 posters.
Key figures of the party in the region,
which is the stronghold of the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP),
were said to be scratching their heads for answers to the present
situation.
Sections of the Ashanti NDC, sources hinted Daily
Guide, were of the view that the ruling party would lose the 2012 polls
should Nana Konadu decide to contest the polls as an independent
candidate. Reports from Koforidua indicate that the ‘Presidential’
posters of Nana Konadu were also splashed all over the Eastern regional
capital.
The sudden splashing of Nana Konadu’s posters in the New
Juaben municipality created panic and uneasiness in the regional branch
of the party as people were quickly mobilized to destroy the posters. Daily Guide spotted two men on an unregistered motorbike going round the city destroying the posters.
The
last time such posters of Nana Konadu Agyeman Rawlings were posted
around Koforidua, the police raided the house of Nana Oboadie Boateng
Bonsu, the People’s National Convention (PNC) parliamentary candidate
for New Juaben who was suspected to be a leading member of the Friends
of Nana Konadu Agyeman Rawlings (FONKAR) in the region. In the raid, Nana Oboadie claimed GH¢12,000 in his possession got missing.
It
was not known whether Nana Oboadie Bonsu would be a target again, but
sources claimed no matter what the intimidation might be, the campaign
for Nana Konadu to lead her husband’s party’ would be unrelenting and
grimmer.
Some NPP members were even arrested in Mpraeso for
allegedly masterminding the printing of the Konadu posters on the ground
that they wanted to plant a seed of disunity in the ruling party. President
Atta Mills health had been an unending topic since he assumed office in
2009 because even after he was elected as the party’s flag-bearer in
2007, some members of his own party challenged him on his alleged ‘ill
health’.
The opposition had been strongly arguing that the NDC
government was spending huge sums of money on the president’s health and
that his recent trips to the USA smacked of ‘emergency check-up’. The
president, during his interaction with journalists last Monday, fumed
at a Daily Guide reporter for asking him about the unending speculations
that he had ‘cancer’.
The president, in his reaction, wondered
why the opposition was so bothered about his health and said he was
ready to submit himself for any medical examination to prove whether he
had cancer or not, pointing out further that this would be on condition
that he would also nominate some other people to go through the same
medical examination.
Just like the present posters, no group claimed responsibility for the then Nana Konadu posters, creating room for speculations. Meanwhile,
Daily Guide has gathered that the Ashanti Regional NDC has been hit
with fear and anguish following the emergence of the Nana Konadu
election 2012 posters.
Key figures of the party in the region,
which is the stronghold of the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP),
were said to be scratching their heads for answers to the present
situation.
Sections of the Ashanti NDC, sources hinted Daily
Guide, were of the view that the ruling party would lose the 2012 polls
should Nana Konadu decide to contest the polls as an independent
candidate. Reports from Koforidua indicate that the ‘Presidential’
posters of Nana Konadu were also splashed all over the Eastern regional
capital. The sudden splashing of Nana Konadu’s posters in the New
Juaben municipality created panic and uneasiness in the regional branch
of the party as people were quickly mobilized to destroy the posters. Daily Guide spotted two men on an unregistered motorbike going round the city destroying the posters.
The
last time such posters of Nana Konadu Agyeman Rawlings were posted
around Koforidua, the police raided the house of Nana Oboadie Boateng
Bonsu, the People’s National Convention (PNC) parliamentary candidate
for New Juaben who was suspected to be a leading member of the Friends
of Nana Konadu Agyeman Rawlings (FONKAR) in the region. In the raid, Nana Oboadie claimed GH¢12,000 in his possession got missing.
It
was not known whether Nana Oboadie Bonsu would be a target again, but
sources claimed no matter what the intimidation might be, the campaign
for Nana Konadu to lead her husband’s party’ would be unrelenting and
grimmer.
Some NPP members were even arrested in Mpraeso for
allegedly masterminding the printing of the Konadu posters on the ground
that they wanted to plant a seed of disunity in the ruling party. President
Atta Mills health had been an unending topic since he assumed office in
2009 because even after he was elected as the party’s flag-bearer in
2007, some members of his own party challenged him on his alleged ‘ill
health’.
The opposition had been strongly arguing that the NDC
government was spending huge sums of money on the president’s health and
that his recent trips to the USA smacked of ‘emergency check-up’. The
president, during his interaction with journalists last Monday, fumed
at a Daily Guide reporter for asking him about the unending speculations
that he had ‘cancer’.
The president, in his reaction, wondered
why the opposition was so bothered about his health and said he was
ready to submit himself for any medical examination to prove whether he
had cancer or not, pointing out further that this would be on condition
that he would also nominate some other people to go through the same
medical examination. |
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