Advertisement

Lecturer urges Ghanaians to vote out "Alibaba and the forty thieves"

 
 
A political science lecturer at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), has called on Ghanaians to vote out NDC which he called "Alibaba and the forty thieves".
Advertisement

Dr. Richard Amoako Baah said any government or administration which does not think about its citizens is not worth staying in power, rainbowradioonline reported.

Advertisement

He said Ghanaians should take back their country from the hands of the "incompetent administration" which is only interested in creating, looting and sharing state resources with their associates.

Baah said widespread corruption coupled with incompetence, mismanagement and lack of vision, has brought the country on its knees leading to increasing unemployment, economic hardship, collapse of local businesses.

He said government appointees are insincere, and do not have the nation at heart but rather engaging in acts that can best be described as an abuse of office and financial misappropriation.

He told Rainbow Radio that Ghanaians should access their current condition of living and decide who deserves their vote in the upcoming general elections.

Advertisement

Hitting back at the political scientist's comments, a deputy general secretary of the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC),  George Lawson accused Baah as being politically bias, meaning he does not qualify to be a political science lecturer."Don’t take that Dr. serious. He is not correct. He is a politician and not a political scientist- and I don’t even know where he got his political scientist [credentials] from. If you are a political scientist and you are called; you are supposed to give an expert advice and not to wear a political lens," George Lawson said in a subsequent interview with Rainbow Radio.

Lawson said government’s projects are not an allusion but a fact and evidence based, and defended the government's projects by saying they are there for all to see.

Advertisement
Latest Videos
Advertisement