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Confirmed: Prez Mills To Be Buried At Flag Staff House

Obituary

Confirmed: Prez Mills To Be Buried At Flag Staff House

{sidebar id=10 align=right}The Funeral Committee has confirmed to the Speaker of Parliament, Mrs. Joyce Bamford-Addo that the late President John Evans Atta Mills will be buried at the Flagstaff House in Accra.

The remains of the former President will be laid to rest near the residence of Ghana's first President, Dr Kwame Nkrumah.

The Minister of Communications, Haruna Iddrisu indicated on Saturday that the late President Mills would be buried at the Flagstaff House also known as the Jubilee House.

But the decision on the Flagstaff House as the final resting place for the late President was put on hold after President John Mahama visited the home region and hometown of President Mills to officially inform them of the demise of the President.

The Funeral Committee on Monday visited the Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Park and Mausoleum, the Military Cemetery, the Castle Marine Drive and the Flagstaff House in a bid to find a suitable ground to develop into a national memorial park to house all Presidents when they die.

President Mills died at the 37 Military Hospital on Tuesday, July 24 after a short illness.

His funeral is scheduled to take place from August 8-10.

Source: citifmonline.com

NDC Gas, Ewes, Fantes in big fight over Veep post

Succession

NDC Gas, Ewes, Fantes in big fight over Veep post

{sidebar id=10 align=right}There has been simmering tension and uneasy calm within the ranks of the ruling National Democratic Congress in the past few days over the imposition of President John Dramani Mahama as presidential candidate and the President’s indecisiveness in choosing a Vice President and/or running mate.

Information available to the New Statesman reveals that the hurried nature with which President John Mahama was endorsed as NDC flagbearer by the National Executive Committee of the party, last week, was solely for the purposes of preventing some big-wigs in the NDC from contesting.

A source at the NDC party headquarters has hinted the New Statesman that the decision to endorse President Mahama quickly, a decision described by some as a lack of respect for the late President John Atta-Mills, “was to prevent Bagbin, Spio and others from running.”

The source further added that the party hierarchy is of the firm belief that anybody other than President Mahama would be soundly beaten by Nana Akufo-Addo, Presidential Candidate of the opposition New Patriotic Party, the more reason President Mahama was imposed on the NDC as its candidate.

This decision by the NDC NEC, according to the source, has infuriated these NDC big-wigs who had been nurturing ambitions of leading the party into an election for some years now, and are now contemplating legal action against the party to ensure the dreams of becoming presidential candidate of the NDC, after the death of President Mills, is not shattered by the imposition of John Mahama.

Meanwhile, the race for the vice presidential slot of the NDC is gathering momentum, with blocs in the party mainly made up of the Fante, Ewe and Ga caucuses gearing up for a showdown to lay claim to this position.

Information reaching the New Statesman indicates that Togbui Afede, Paramount Chief of the Asogli Traditional Council, is mobilizing chiefs to lobby the leadership of the NDC, as well as the President, for the position of the Vice President/Running Mate.

{sidebar id=12 align=right}Described as the Volta caucus, insiders have told the New Statesman that those pushing for the selection of a candidate from the Volta region are fairly convinced that this move will blunt out the possible effects of former President and founder of the NDC, Jerry John Rawlings, convincing residents of the region not to vote for the NDC.

Failure to elect a “Voltarian”, insiders have warned, will result in the NDC losing a huge chunk of votes, largely due to voter apathy and the influence of the Rawlingses persuading voters to cast their votes for any party but the NDC.

Similarly, the Fante caucus within the party, allegedly headed by the Ahwois, “favours a Fante” to compensate the Central Region for the loss of President Mills and also to feed into the greater Akan votes, with Akans said to constitute 47.5% of the population.

With respect to an Akan candidate, members of the Fante caucus are said to favour Victor Smith, current Eastern Regional Minister, and Samuel Ofosu Ampofo, Minister of Local Government and Rural Development, both indigenes from the Eastern Region. Regarding their preferred candidate from the Ashanti region, PV Obeng, according to sources, stands tall.

Ultimately ensuring that the Greater Accra region is not left out of this scramble, the New Statesman has gathered that the Mayor of Accra, Alfred Oko Vanderpuye, is seriously lobbying to become the Vice President of Ghana, likewise ET Mensah, Minister for Water Resources, Works and Housing.

“The interest from the AMA boss and ET Mensah is very real. They have approached a number of top shots within the party to ensure President Mahama does not make the mistake of selecting anyone else apart from them,” the source told this paper.

Surprisingly, self-acclaimed director of operations at the Castle, Nii Lantey Vanderpuye, also wants to be named Vice President of the Republic of Ghana and feels his Ga-Adangbe connections will help win the region, described as one of the battle grounds on December 7, for the NDC.

Fiifi Arhin

Source: thesatesmanonline.com

Can Mahama do Better in Ghana?

Governance

Photo ReportingCan Mahama do Better in Ghana?

"Youthful Exuberance" in Leadership - Can Mahama do Better in Ghana?

Former Ghana President Rawlings mention of the fact that due to the late President Mills illness he was only capable of working 3 hours per day seems awkward to many in our culture of humans that I have studied, not only in Ghana but even in America. You just don't use certain words and don't usually criticize a leader or person who just passed in those words.

How Rawlings poked the eyes of the Atta-Mills family and Ghanaians

Opinion

Photo ReportingHow Rawlings poked the eyes of the Atta-Mills family and Ghanaians

For those of you who have been around for a while, you would remember the fierce battle of words between two leading Ghanaian journalists, the late Dan Ansah of the Voice Newspaper, and the late George Nakene of the Catholic Standard, I guess; that was one battle that had one of the most bizarre ends in the history of Ghanaian journalism.

Prez Mills' Disposition Always Calmed Me - Prez Mahama

politics

Prez Mills' Disposition Always Calmed Me - Prez Mahama

{sidebar id=10 align=right}President John Dramani Mahama says he is confident that the tutelage he received from the late President J.E.A. Mills while serving as his vice president is enough to enable him lead the country for the remaining months of the government’s term.

President Mahama made the remarks when he led a government delegation to the home town of the late president to commiserate with his family on his demise.

The president also paid a courtesy call on the paramount chief of Cape Coast before heading to the family house of the late president at Otuam also in the Central Region.

President Mills met his untimely death last Tuesday at about 14:15GMT at the 37 Military Hospital after a short illness.

Addressing a large crowd of mourners and family members, President Mahama said the late president gave him the opportunity to exhibit his leadership skills and always offered him a listening ear.

“He reposed absolute trust in me. Any time there was tribulation and I went to him, he calmed me down and he always said ‘John, I trust you, I like the work you are doing, carry on,’" he narrated.

According to President Mahama, “anytime we had problems in government, sometimes I despaired. Sometimes we had very difficult challenges and his disposition always calmed me.”

Meanwhile the Chief of Staff, Henry Martey Newman, who was also part of the delegation, paid a glowing tribute to the late president saying he was an intellectual man of peace with great leadership skills.

He said President Mills was a “great leader, our mentor, our philosopher, our Christian leader, our friend, our brother, father, our grandfather, our teacher, our professor. I could continue for a long, long time.”

Mr Newman stated that even before the president passed away he was thinking about the country and the last letter he signed attests to his dedication to the country.

Source: Radioxyzonline