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6,000 security personnel for Akufo-Addo's inauguration needless, withdraw them - Minority

By Mutala Yakubu
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The Minority in Parliament wants the government to withdraw the deployment of some Six thousand security personnel to Parliament for the inauguration of President-elect Akufo-Addo.

The Minority in a statement signed by its Leader Haruna Iddrisu accused the government of using the National Security to advance parochial partisan interests, which in his view is an affront to the dignity of the legislative arm of government.

READ ALSO: 6,000 security personnel to be deployed for swearing-in of President-elect

It will be recalled that the Police in a news release said they will deploy some Six thousand security personnel made up of personnel from the Ghana Police Service, the Ghana Armed Forces and allied security agencies to provide security to ensure the protection of lives and properties and general maintenance of law and order for the swearing ceremonies on January 7, 2021.

Portions of the Minority statement read: “We hold President Akufo-Addo as Commander-in-Chief of the Ghana Armed Forces and Chair of the National Security Council directly responsible for this unwarranted and reckless deployment. We shall hold him liable for any breach or obstruction in the discharge of our lawful functions.

“The NDC caucus in Parliament demands the immediate withdrawal of this detachment of soldiers, police personnel and purported national security operatives. We shall continue to resist the mindless assault on the pillars of our constitutional democracy. Ghana is not a dictatorship,” he stated.

Below is the full statement:

NDC CAUCUS IN PARLIAMENT CONDEMNS GESTAPO-STYLE SECURITY INVASION OF PARLIAMENT AND DEMANDS THEIR IMMEDIATE WITHDRAWAL

The NDC Caucus in Parliament notes with disgust and utter revulsion the heavy-handed and Gestapo-style invasion of the august House of Parliament by security personnel at the behest of the Akufo-Addo administration.

We strongly condemn the obvious creeping despotism and blatant misuse of the national security apparatus to advance narrow parochial partisan interests.

Parliaments in every democratic jurisdiction represent the bulwark of democratic freedoms and we insist that this excessive abuse of state power to intimidate Members of Parliament represents a desecration of our highly revered parliamentary democracy and a grave affront to the dignity of the legislative arm.

It is to uphold the universal tenets of good parliamentary democracy that our Standing Orders provide in Order 30:

“The following acts or conduct shall constitute a breach of privilege or contempt of Parliament –

I) causing or effecting the arrest of a Member or officer of Parliament during the proceedings of Parliament or in the course of his duties;

J) molestation of Members or officers in connection with the performance of their duties in or out of Parliament;

L) attempted intimidation by threats of Members in the conduct of their duties.”

We hold President Akufo-Addo as Commander-in-chief of the Ghana Armed Forces and Chair of the National Security Council directly responsible for this unwarranted and reckless deployment. We shall hold him liable for any breach or obstruction in the discharge of our lawful functions.

The NDC caucus in Parliament demands the immediate withdrawal of this detachment of soldiers, police personnel and purported national security operatives.

We shall continue to resist the mindless assault on the pillars of our constitutional democracy. Ghana is not a dictatorship. Those who seek to erode our democratic gains and usher us into a tyrannic dispensation would be fought and defeated.

The NDC Parliamentary Caucus refuses to sit idle and allow the House of the People’s Representatives to be taken hostage in scenes reminiscent of the recent state-sponsored thuggery witnessed at EC Collation Centres where similar invasions led to needles loss of lives and injuries.

We are not a group to be intimidated by guns and might when we know we are on the side of the people, on the side of right, on the side of good conscience, on the side of justice and on the side of our national anthem which admonishes us to resist oppressor’s rule.

Signed,
Haruna Iddrisu
Hon. MP, Tamale South
[Minority Leader of the 7th Parliament.]

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