GhanaHeadlineNewsPolitics

Gyampo to #FixTheCountry campaigners: Your call to government is premature

The political science lecturer says the organisers of the #FixTheCountry campaign should give the government three months to drive home their demands

Professor Ransford Gyampo, an associate professor at the Political Science Department of the University of Ghana has described the call by #FixTheCountry campaigners for the government to fix the myriad of problems facing the country as premature.

Speaking to Kojo Mensah on the Asaase Breakfast Show (ABS) on Friday (7 May), Prof Gyampo said the call cannot be justified especially when the president is still in the process of forming his government.

“My view is that this is a new government, people are doing their own maths and calculation and saying that government has been in office for five years, but in my own thinking, I think this is a government in a second term, the government itself is yet to be fully formed,” he said.

He added, “As we speak now ministers have been appointed but deputy ministers are yet to be vetted, MMDCE’s have not been appointed, boards that have been dissolved are yet to be fully reconstituted.”

Grace period

Prof Gyampo wants the conveners of the #FixTheCountry campaign to give the government at least three months before making their demands.

“And so in my view, the government is yet to be fully formed and so if there is the need to make such calls, I would have wished that those calls had delayed a little, let give them two to three more months…. I think those making the calls should exercise some restraint.”

He, however, described as unfortunate the attempt to link organisers of the campaign to elements in the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC).

Injunction

Meanwhile, an Accra High Court has banned the organisers of the #FixTheCountry campaign from going on their planned protest on 9 May 2021.

The brains behind the viral #FixTheCountry campaign on social media had served notice of a public protest slated for 9 May 2021.

In a notice to the police, the conveners said the protest is to draw the government’s attention to the unemployment situation in the country coupled with other unfulfilled promises.

“We write with reference to Section 1 of the Public Order Act (Act 491), which provides that any person who desires to hold any special event within the meaning of that Act in any public place shall notify the police of his intention not less than five days before the date of the special event,” the notice to the police said.

The organisers promised to take into consideration all COVID-19 protocols, adding they do not intend to present a petition to President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.

Fred Dzakpata

Asaase Radio 99.5 – tune in or log on to broadcasts online
Follow us on Twitter: @asaaseradio995
#asaaseradio
 #TVO

Show More

Related Articles

Back to top button

Adblock Detected

ALLOW OUR ADS