27th September 2023 12:08:45 PM
5 mins readIndependent presidential candidate, Alan Kyerematen, has indicated that then-chairman of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), late B.J. da Rocha, prior to his death, rendered an apology for describing him as “disruptive factor a stumbling block, and a loose canon if accepted back into the fold of the NPP.”He claimed that the apology came after he approached and rebuked Rocha over the statement.
0
“I had just met Da Rocha in Accra on my way to Kumasi and when I arrived, he had already an granted an interview, calling me a disruptive factor. I asked him if he was serious at all because I felt as an elderly person, he should know better. I told him he acted in bad faith. Later on, he called consistently to apologise before his death,” he disclosed on Accra-based UTV.
1
His comments come after his second resignation from the NPP on Monday, reigniting a statement made about him by Mr. Rocha 15 years ago.In April 2008, when Mr. Kyerematen resigned from the NPP and there were attempts to persuade him to return, Mr. Rocha stated that it would not be in the best interest of the party to welcome him back.
2
His rationale was that Alan could potentially become a 'disruptive factor in the party, a stumbling block, and a loose cannon.'Mr. da Rocha was quoted by the Ghana News Agency in 2008 as saying, "the party has an election to win. We should concentrate our efforts on the task ahead and let him go his way in peace.
3
"Some individuals believe that Alan Kyerematen's second resignation, stemming from the fallout of the August 26 Super Delegates Conference, validates the late NPP stalwart's earlier statement. However, Mr. Kyerematen has expressed frustration over how his sacrifices for the party have been used against him.
4
Throwback to the incidence between Alan Kyeremanten and BJ da Rocha in 2008When Alan Kyerematen resigned from the New Patriotic Party (NPP) in April 2008, and attempts were made to bring him back into the fold, a former Chairman and elder of the NPP, Mr. B. J. da Rocha, made a prediction.Mr. B. J. da Rocha stated that admitting Mr. Alan Kyeremanten back into the NPP would not be in the best interests of the party.
5
His reason was that he could become a "disruptive factor in the party, a stumbling block and loose cannon"."The party has an election to win. We should concentrate our efforts on the task ahead and let him go his way in peace," Mr da Rocha said in a report filed by the Ghana News Agency in 2008.
6
It is now official, following the personal confirmation by Alan Kwadwo Kyerematen that he was going to contest the 2024 presidential election as an independent candidate.Alan officially submitted his resignation letter indicating he was no longer interested in being a member of the NPP on Monday [September 25, 2023].Immediately after that, he addressed a press conference and announced his decision to contest 2024 as an independent candidate.
7
He is now forming a movement, called "Movement for Change" with a Monarch Butterfly as the symbol.This is a big blow to the governing New Patriotic Party as the move would greatly affect the unity of the party going into Election 2024.
8
The NPP has been at the helm of affairs in governance since January 7, 2017, and hoping to break the eight-year cycle of change of government which usually alternates between the NPP and the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC).
9
The speculations about Alan Kyerematen's resignation and independent presidential ambition intensified over the weekend and got NPP members jittery after a poster announcing his planned press conference at the Movenpick Hotel on Monday afternoon was released by his aides and supporters.In fact, the speculations had actually started earlier, before September 5, 2023, the day he announced his withdrawal from the current NPP presidential race.
10
Alan was shortlisted as part of the top five candidates who were going into the final selection on November 4, 2023, but some people believed that he would have lost the November 4 election, considering the popularity gained by Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia and Kennedy Ohene Agyapong as the leading candidates in the Special Super Delegates conference.
11
Alan placed third in the August 2023 Special Delegates conference having garnered less than 100 votes out of the over 900 votes.Kennedy Ohene Agyapong, considered by some as a "non-presidential" material who entered the NPP presidential race just recently beat Alan, who had been in the race for more than 16 years.
12
Alan's name first came up in 2005 as the replacement for the then President John Agyekum Kufuor who was retiring on January 6, 2009, as the leader of the NPP.In 2007, Alan contested with 16 other candidates and came second, as Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo [now President of Ghana] beat him and became the leading candidate.
13
Akufo-Addo has led the party since 2007 as the first presidential choice and has subsequently beaten Alan Kyerematen in other NPP presidential primaries.President Akufo-Addo is retiring on January 6, 2025, hence the NPP is looking for a replacement.President Akufo-Addo's vice, Dr Mahamudu Bawumia has shot up as the next preferable choice, with many party members throwing their support behind him.
14
He garnered a convincing endorsement of over 50 percent votes at the special delegates conference held in August 2023.The larger Electoral College of the NPP will on November 4, 2023, select the next leader.However, Alan Kyerematen expressed his unhappiness with the process that led to Dr. Bawumia's convincing victory in the Super Delegates Conference.Some of Alan's aides alleged that the presidency was supporting Dr.
15
Bawumia behind the scenes and also influencing delegates clandestinely.To Alan, his spokespersons and supporters, it was Alan's time to lead the NPP, having waited for over 16 years for his turn and that it is not time yet for Dr. Bawumia whom they claim only joined the race recently. They wanted Alan to lead after which Dr. Bawumia could have also taken the baton.
16
Supporters of Bawumia however think otherwise, and argue that since it was a contest, they should allow the delegates to decide who leads the party.Second time Alan is quitting NPPFeeling bitter about the loss in the 2007 presidential primary and what he described subsequently as being sidelined, Alan, in 2008 resigned from the NPP in a similar move but was politically coerced and later rejoined the party.
17
But while those discussions were underway to bring Alan back to the NPP, former Chairman and elder of the NPP, Mr. B. J. da Rocha [deceased] sounded this caution.
18
2 mins read
2 mins read
2 mins read
2 mins read
4 mins read
1 min read
2 mins read
2 mins read
2 mins read