...over Mahama Tweets
Hundreds of Ghanaians will next week stage a peaceful protest march on
behalf of government against the American Embassy in Ghana for launching
an attack on a social media post by President John Dramani Mahama.
The demonstrators are seeking to petition the American President,
Barrack Obama, through the American Ambassador to Ghana, Gene A. Cretz,
for an apology and action against the Embassy official responsible for
the blunder. The march is jointly being organized by the Progressive
Socialists Forum of Ghana and the New Politics Network (NPN) - an
apolitical grouping. It is scheduled for Friday July 25, 2014 in Accra.
“We are presenting a petition to the US President and his people via
the Embassy to render an unqualified apology to the President and people
of Ghana. We would request to know the position of the person they
claim replied the President,” stated Ohenenana Obonti Krow, a social
media communicator, who is at the forefront of organizing public support
for the protest.
The group will also request the Embassy to tell the world where the
personnel who pushed the trigger works in the Embassy and demand that he
be transferred from the Embassy since the attitude makes him or her a
serious threat to the country’s national security.
“I don't support any political twist to this reckless action by the US
Embassy, we must collectively stand-up against this imperialist’s
manipulations and recklessness. We may have our differences and can
continue our internal political banter, but never must we allow any
foreign entity to dictate the pace of our political movement,” he told
Spy News Agency in an interview.
President John Mahama in his regular conversation with Ghanaians last
week posted a tweet on his official tweeter handle assuring Ghanaians
that the current economic difficulties will soon be over.
The tweet reads “As a people, we have had to make sacrifices. I wish to
assure you that the results of these sacrifices would begin to show very
soon.”
The US Embassy re-tweeted, “And what sacrifices are you making? Don’t tell me that pay cut.”
Some Ghanaian government officials including the Ag. National Youth
Co-ordinator, Ras Mubarak and the Minister responsible for Foreign
Affairs, Hannah Serwa Tetteh, immediately took the issue on, demanding
an unqualified apology from the Embassy.
Even though the Embassy came out with some form of apology to the
President and an explanation that claims that their official mistook the
official Embassy tweeter handle as his personal handle, not many are
satisfied with the clarification.
A deputy Minister of Education in charge of tertiary, Samuel Okudzeto
Ablakwa, on a radio discussion programme last Saturday, said the US
Embassy and the US Government needs to do more in the current tweeter
comment saga to convince Ghanaians that they really meant no harm.
He described the comment as unacceptable, and said the explanation given by the Embassy does not help matters.
He bemoaned the fact that some newspapers in Ghana have carried the
development and portraying it as “NDC versus the US Embassy” thing,
describing the development as “unfortunate.”
He argued: “this is about Ghana, our Sovereign Republic, which is at
stake and not a political party…Our laws are very clear. Foreigners
cannot engage in politics or meddle [in] our affairs.”
According to him, what is even more worrying is the attempt by the US
Embassy to “clean it up,” adding “The subsequent tweets are very
frightening.”
Source: Jeorge Wilson Kingson || Spy News Agency
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