A former General Secretary of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) and now a member of the Alan Kyerematen campaign team, Nana Ohene Ntow, has dismissed claims suggesting that the independent presidential candidate was preaching divisiveness by urging Ghanaians to vote for a Christian leader in the upcoming general election.
According to him, Mr Kyerematen's assertion that Christians should vote for a ‘Christian-like’ president in the forthcoming December 2024 election was merely political rhetoric and has nothing to do with religion.
Speaking on JoyNews' Upfront on Wednesday, April 3, Mr Ntow stated that it is hypocritical for anybody, especially political opponents whose candidate has been promoting Muslims voting for Muslims, to assert that because Mr Kyerematen said he is a Christian, they should vote for him.
“This talk, very obviously for anybody who will be honest, is political and has nothing to do with religion. If it has anything to do with religion, it is the advantage that both Bawumia and Alan and others see that they can take of the religious lobby that they are also getting closer, endearing themselves to that.”
“So if anybody turns around and says all these, basically insulting Alan, I see it as political manners,” he said.
His comment comes after the leader of the Movement for Change called on Ghanaians to elect a 'Christlike' president in the forthcoming December 2024 elections.
Read also: Election 2024: Let’s elect a Christian leader who is Christlike – Alan Kyerematen
While addressing congregants of the Church of Pentecost, Dr Wyatt Assembly over the weekend, Mr Kyerematen said, “As a predominantly Christian nation, as Christians, it is our responsibility that we elect a Christian leader, who is also a Christ-like leader.
“We want a leader who has the vision to bring hope to the hopeless, but we also want a leader who will be a servant leader to serve the people and not to lord over them.
“We also want a leader who has integrity. These were the characteristics of our Lord Jesus who today is risen."
On the back of this, the former NPP General Secretary argued that every smart politician who wants to win an election will solicit votes from religious bodies.
“If you have a majority social segment, a demographic segment, a religious segment and it gets into politics, every smart, sensible politician like Dr Bawumia who is a Muslim candidate and realizes that the numbers for the voters, they are the churches, why is he dancing around churches?
“Has he suddenly become a Christian? Has he confessed? So I’m saying Dr Bawumia going to church, a Muslim, and he’s asking Christians to vote for him, and a Christian going to Church asks Christians to vote for him, and people are telling him he’s creating tension.”
Mr Ntow said that Mr Kyerematen had announced that he was going to form a government of national unity irrespective of any political party but not going to form a religious party or government.
He argued that Mr Kyerematen was campaigning for votes and he went to a predominantly Christian area, asking Christians to vote for him.
Meanwhile, the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) has joined the New Patriotic Party (NPP) to condemn the comments by Mr Kyerematen.
Read also: NDC joins NPP to condemn Alan Kyerematen’s call for a Christian leader
The Director of Communications for the NPP, Richard Ahiagbah says such comments do not augur well for national cohesion.
He argues that the statement by the former Trades Minister is divisive and contrary to the religious inclusivity in Ghanaian politics.
Latest Stories
-
Baltasar Coin becomes first Ghanaian meme coin to hit DEX Screener at $100K market cap
22 minutes -
EC blames re-collation of disputed results on widespread lawlessness by party supporters
37 minutes -
Top 20 Ghanaian songs released in 2024
58 minutes -
Beating Messi’s Inter Miami to MLS Cup feels amazing – Joseph Paintsil
1 hour -
NDC administration will reverse all ‘last-minute’ gov’t employee promotions – Asiedu Nketiah
1 hour -
Kudus sights ‘authority and kingship’ for elephant stool celebration
1 hour -
We’ll embrace cutting-edge technologies to address emerging healthcare needs – Prof. Antwi-Kusi
2 hours -
Nana Aba Anamoah, Cwesi Oteng special guests for Philip Nai and Friends’ charity event
2 hours -
Environmental protection officers receive training on how to tackle climate change
2 hours -
CLOGSAG vows to resist partisan appointments in Civil, Local Government Service
3 hours -
Peasant Farmers Association welcomes Mahama’s move to rename Agric Ministry
3 hours -
NDC grateful to chiefs, people of Bono Region -Asiedu Nketia
3 hours -
Ban on smoking in public: FDA engages food service establishments on compliance
3 hours -
Mahama’s administration to consider opening Ghana’s Mission in Budapest
3 hours -
GEPA commits to building robust systems that empower MSMEs
3 hours