Violence in By-elections: Bryan Acheampong Must Retreat – Agalga



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Bryan Acheampong W Minister of State for National Security Bryan Acheampong

Defense and Minority Interior spokesman James Agalga called on State Minister for National Security Bryan Acheampong to abandon the findings of an investigation into last week's shootout at the partial election of Ayawaso West Wuogon.

Police said Tuesday in a statement that she had expanded her investigation committee on the incident to cover the professional and criminal acts of the people involved.

The statement signed by ACP David Eklu, Director General of Public Affairs, stated that ACP Mr. George Tweneboah, Deputy Director General, headed the committee of inquiry.

Police said that senior officials of the Bureau of Professional Standards Police, the Directorate of Legal Affairs and Police Prosecutions, as well as detectives from the Crime Scene Unit of the police and the Airport Division, joined the investigation to denounce the widely condemned incident.

To date, 16 victims of the shooting, including a member of Parliament, have been questioned.

Despite these efforts, James Agalga, also a member of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) of Builsa North in the Upper East region, said the police were struggling to resolve the violent attack that had tainted 39, by-election if Mr. Acheampong remained at the post office.

Mr. Acheampong told Joy News on Saturday that the National Security Working Group, consisting of police officers, army officers and security personnel, is usually deployed at the home of each presidential candidate and to the parliament leading to the elections.

"It's a standard protocol to protect every candidate," he said of the deployment of masked security personnel, adding, "We also receive intelligence information and we track, track and neutralize where appropriate … He explained.

However, he did not know that just hours before the partial election of Ayawaso West Wuogon on Thursday, dozens of armed men wearing a black mask and a shirt "NSC" would sack the home of the president NDC, Delali Brempong, where the violence took place.

According to official reports from the police, six people were shot and wounded, although this number was disputed by eyewitnesses.

Speaking Tuesday evening on PM Express, Agalga said the reasons for the deployment of Mr. Acheampong's masked security personnel made it clear that engaging the perpetrators would be intimidating. .

"I do not blame the police because the task badigned to them is Herculean. How can the police investigate his own boss? Bryan Acheampong is their leader … while Bryan Acheampong remains in office, how is it possible for the police to submit him to an appropriate interrogation? He asked.

In Ghana, no one should be above the law, said Agalga, but said: "It seems that Bryan Acheampong is above the law. If Bryan Acheampong is not above the law, he would not deploy armed gangsters to visit the violence against innocent civilians who went to the polls on polling day. "

Mathew Nyindam, deputy majority bad, also said that, given the fact that by-elections have always been violent, it was necessary to review the system.

He said that instead of holding elections for a new parliamentarian when an incumbent MP dies before his term, there should be internal elections within the party that he represented.

"These by-elections do not help us and they come with violence …," said Nyindam.

Meanwhile, the minority refused to recognize the new Ayawaso West Wuogon MP, Lydia Alhbadan.

They left Parliament Tuesday while she was sworn in because, in the words of James Agalga, "his hands are stained with the innocent blood of Ghanaians who were shot at without provocation" at the time of his death. by-election.

The headquarters of Ayawaso West Wuogon became vacant following the death of Emmanuel Agyarko last year.

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