The second witness for the petitioner in the ongoing election petition hearing has told the Supreme Court that they complied with the request by the EC Chair before leaving the national collation centre.
Dr Michael Kpessa-Whyte said together with his colleague, Rojo Mettle-Nunoo, were asked by Jean Mensa to go and see the 2020 NDC presidential candidate, John Mahama, prior to the declaration of the results of the December polls.
The senior lecturer at the University of Ghana and member of the NDC, made this comment during cross-examination by lead counsel for the First Respondent, Justin Amenuvor.
According to him, they left only to realise the EC boss' instruction was meant to lure them out of the national collation centre so she can announce the results.
He noted that as one of the petitioner’s representatives in EC’s national collation centre, they noticed many irregularities during the collation process to which they drew the EC's attention.
According to him, when he drew the attention of Mrs Mensa she asked them to go and consult with their flagbearer [Mahama] on the irregularities they had raised. They took this "instruction" in good faith and left the room.
“We only left on the instructions of the Chairperson of the Electoral Commission who happens to be the Returning Officer. And we did so because in the performance of our duties as a representative of the petitioner we observed a number of issues of concern to us which had the potential of undermining or creating problems for the ultimate outcome of the elections".
Although he admitted to not having received the said "instructions" from the EC Chairperson directly, he added that they "had no reason not to believe she was acting in good faith only for us to realise we were deceived into getting out of the place".
He further revealed that Mrs Mensa assured them that she would wait for their return before the results of the presidential election was declared.
However, Dr Kpessa-Whyte, told the apex court that upon leaving, Jean Mensa declared the flagbearer of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Akufo-Addo as President-elect.
"She said she will make sure that she sends a rider to bring us back to the strongroom (national collation centre) because of the potential of traffic, then, therefore, when we finish the process then the results would be announced,”
“Indeed we returned to the place in about 45 minutes to 1 hour only to have the strongroom completely deserted with everything packed out,” he added.
Latest Stories
-
Shatta Wale exposed me to the business side of the music – Kweku Flick
35 seconds -
ECG isn’t as bad as we think, we’re facing challenges – PUWU General Secretary
6 minutes -
Ntim Fordjour requests joint briefing by National Security, NIB, CID and Narcotics Control Commission in Parliament
12 minutes -
Court revokes order to release excavators seized in Boin Forest illegal mining case
13 minutes -
GH Schools inducts 986 learners
13 minutes -
Ghana, IMF begin fourth review mission amid economic reforms
28 minutes -
Suspected stolen ECG cables found in Gomoa Awombrew, truck driver arrested – A-Plus
33 minutes -
Conversation with Bright: The right mindset for good governance
33 minutes -
Volta Region: Agotime-Ziope DCE nominee gets unanimous endorsement
37 minutes -
Bless Kodjo Katamani confirmed as DCE for Akatsi North
44 minutes -
‘If I steal your data, I lose my bonus’ – MTN CEO Stephen Blewett on data depletion concerns
45 minutes -
Indian cities embrace white rooftops to beat rising temperatures without fans or ACs
47 minutes -
World Conference of Mayors signs MoU for partnership with Rain Foundation
52 minutes -
KiDi announces 3rd studio album ‘Where Do We Go From Here’
55 minutes -
‘We don’t have any desire to steal your data’ – MTN CEO Stephen Blewett
1 hour