The story as captured on the front page of Daily Graphic of Thursday October 3, 2013. |
The EDITORIAL of the day (Oct, 3, 2014) was dedicated to the issue |
The
Lower Manya Krobo Municipal Assembly (LMKMA) may soon be
counting its losses in taxes following the declaration of “self-governance” by
the chiefs and people of the Manya Krobo Traditional Council.
The
decision means a boycott of the payment of tolls, taxes and levies which
constitute internally generated funds (IGFs) on which the assembly runs.
Currently,
an interim management team is managing the affairs of the assembly, which has
been without elected members since 2010.
Last
week, the Manya Krobo Traditional Council issued a seven-day ultimatum to the
Electoral Commission (EC) to announce a date for assembly elections, which were
not held in 2010 because of a dispute over the alignment of seven electoral
areas in the municipality in the Eastern Region with the Dangme West District
in the Greater Accra Region.
The
ultimatum
In a
letter dated Tuesday, September 24, 2013 and addressed to the Chairman of the
EC, the council had stated that the date for the election must not be later
than Friday, October 25, 2013, the day for the grand durbar for this year’s
annual Ngmayem Festival.
But
with the EC failing to yield to their demands, the chiefs and people made their
intention to carry out their threat known at a press conference at the
Agormanya Roman Catholic Parish Hall.
Speaking
at the highly charged press conference, Nene Asada Ahor I, the Chief of Akuse
and Public Relations Officer of the council, warned: “If by the last week of
this month, when we celebrate our annual Ngmayem Festival, the elections are
not held, we will take the campaign a step further to aggressively demand our
constitutional rights as a people.”
He
did not reveal what the council would do further, but said it would be made known
at the right time.
More
than 50 armed riot policemen pitched camp at the church to ensure law and order
at the press conference.
Even
though the event was peaceful, seemingly angry natives of the area, clad in
red, intermittently sang war songs and chanted in unison to express their
frustration at the prevailing situation.
Nene
Ahor said the chiefs and people had been compelled to take the decision
following what they “perceived as blatant disregard for our welfare and
constitutional right to issue a seven-day ultimatum, within which the EC was
expected to, if for nothing at all, announce the provisional date for the
elections. Once again, our request and ultimatum were treated with scorn”.
The
chiefs and people of Manya Krobo and the EC have been in disagreement since
2010.
Even
though the case went to court and the Supreme Court, on June 13, 2012, ruled in
favour of the traditional council, thereby preventing the EC from altering the
borders of the Manya Krobo municipality, appeals to the EC to organise the
assembly election have not yielded any fruit.
Letter
from the Presidency
Indeed,
a letter dated June 28, 2013, signed by Dr Raymond Atuguba, the Executive
Secretary to the President, addressed to the Chairman of the EC and copied to
the Minister of Local Government and Rural Development and the Office of the
President had asked the EC to take the required action on a request from the
Local Government Ministry for elections to be held in the municipality.
In
that respect, Nene Ahor said, “For nearly three years we have not had assembly
members in our various communities as the other municipalities and districts in
the country do and nobody is giving us any official reason for the continuous
delay, despite our numerous appeals.”
Mr
Philip Tetteh Padi, the Commissioner for Kloma Gbi, a Krobo youth pressure
group, said, “The chiefs are not into
this campaign alone. We the youth and the citizenry are in as well and will
contribute to any effort and activity lined up to demand our constitutional
rights.”
Assembly’s
response
In
his reaction, the Municipal Chief Executive, Mr Isaac Agbo Tetteh, said while
he agreed with the need for the EC to hold elections, the assembly would not
endorse the action of the chiefs and the people.
“It
is against the law to incite people not to pay tolls and taxes. As far as I’m
concerned, the law is explicit; not even the President nor I can prevent people
from paying taxes,” he added.
Responding
to the concerns raised, the Public Affairs Director of the EC, Mr Christian
Owusu-Parry, said he was not “aware of any letter on the outstanding district
level elections”.
He
said it was not the fault of the EC that the elections were not held in the
municipality in 2010.
“Before
the elections, the people of Lower Manya Krobo stormed the EC office and locked
the place up because of challenges with some electoral areas. By that conduct,
they made it impossible for us to conduct the elections,” he said.
That
notwithstanding, Mr Owusu Parry said, currently the issue was being given
consideration by the EC.
He
said after the Supreme Court ruling, there had been consultations between the
EC and the Local Government Ministry.
He,
however, declined to give timelines for the elections in the municipality,
saying, “I cannot give the exact date the election will be held there but it is
being given due consideration.”
Background
In
2010, a Parliamentary Sub-Legislation Committee, acting on the Local Government
Instrument 2010, LI 1983 (Creation of New District Electoral Areas and
Designation of Units), illegally aligned seven electoral areas — Zongo New
Town, Akutue, Osukutu, Bungalow, Amedeka, Salon and Natriku — at Akuse,
originally part of the Lower Manya Krobo municipality in the Eastern Region to
the Dangme West District (now Shai-Osudoku District) in the Greater Accra
Region, sparking off a boundary dispute that led to the suspension of the
assembly elections in the entire municipality.
Subsequent
to that, attempts were made by the EC during the 2010 district assembly
elections to rope the candidates of the seven disputed electoral areas into
the elections under the Dangme West
District, leading to a near bloody attack and months-long closure of the EC’s
office in the Manya Krobo District.
The
elections, however, took place at Natriku but not at the other six communities.
As a
result, the Manya Krobo Traditional Council, led by the Defender of the Krobo
State, Mahefalor Nene Kwesitsu Azago I, and Mr Charles Mate-Kole secured an
injunction to restrain the EC from conducting the elections in the entire Manya
Krobo municipality, rendering the assembly empty till date.
After
what proved to be a costly legal battle spanning a period of one-and-a-half
years (December 2010 to June 2012), the Supreme Court declared the said LI 1983
unconstitutional and retained the electoral areas in Lower Manya in the Eastern
Region.
But
more than two years after the assembly elections were held nationwide and
nearly one-and-a-half years after the ruling on the dispute by the Supreme
Court (on June 13, 2012), the elections are yet to be held.
Published: Thursday October 3, 2013, Front page
- See
more at:
http://graphic.com.gh/news/politics/1295-boycott-lower-manya-krobo-declares-self-government.html#sthash.ifyyxQgc.dpuf
Front page |
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Opinion: By Herman Domeno Ablade Adjase-Kodjo |
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