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Freddie Blay – NPP National Chairman and Samuel Ofosu Ampofo – NDC National Chairman

Leaders of the two main political parties – New Patriotic Party
(NPP) and the National Democratic Congress (NDC) – have reached a consensus on
the need for the National Peace Council (NPC) to provide a working document on
a roadmap to eradicate political vigilantism in the country.

The working document is expected to be ready in four weeks, and will
be based on the contributions of technical experts, two main political parties,
as well as reports from stakeholders on eradicating political vigilantism.

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The decision was reached after a two-day closed-door meeting between
the two parties, which ended on Tuesday.

The communiqué, which was issued after the meeting, also spelt out a
draft code of conduct that had been designed by the NPC to be considered as one
of the deliverables in the preparation of the roadmap.

The member of the NPC, Nana Susubribi Krobea Asante read the
statement, which was jointly signed by the chairman of the NDC, Samuel Ofosu-Ampofo
and chairman of the NPP, Freddie Blay.

The meeting, which took place at Peduase, near Aburi in the Eastern
Region, was attended by top officials of both parties, including John Boadu,
General Secretary of the NPP and Johnson Asiedu Nketia, NDC’s General
Secretary.

Also present were representatives from civil society organisations
(CSOs), religious bodies and security agencies.

The Director of the Faculty of Academic Affairs and Research at the
Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC), Dr. Kwesi Aning,
urged stakeholders to anticipate tension as part of efforts to demobilise or
disband vigilante groups.

He said a discursive analysis of rhetoric and language over the past
36 months showed reluctance to demobilise or disband groups, who portrayed
themselves as powerful entities that represent the voice of the people.

He also identified a gap between what leaders of political parties did
and said against the behaviour of supporters which was either due to wrong
communication or improper information flow from top to down.

“We need to think through technical and specific interventions to
ensure messages are couched in a manner that the process does not get out of
hand,” he said.

Dr Aning called for the studying of the process to include the local
context, opposing forces and external imperatives that may destabilise the process.

“The process of disbandment should be situated within the broader
political context of West Africa, which depict a signal of a ready market for
young people who were often frustrated, well organised and knew how to use violent
tools.”

He also called on political actors to use language that would
promote consensus building.

Spokesperson for the National Chief Imam, Sheikh Armeyaw Shuaibu, for
his part, called on political actors to reflect on the purpose of politics and
genuinely question their commitment to the peace, security and wellbeing of
Ghanaians.

“Pursue the politics of conscience, ethics and morality in seeking
the political authority to render service to the majority of people who are
underprivileged,” he said.

Secretary General of the National Catholic Secretariat, Reverend
Father Lazarus Anondee, who represented the Catholic Bishops Conference, said reforms
must be implemented alongside demobilising or disbanding political party
vigilante groups.

“These include providing support to members of disbanded groups to
find alternative livelihoods, tackling inequalities within the political system
by taking strong action against corruption, doing away with the winner-takes-all
system and making the police an independent institution.”

He also urged politicians to shun the blame game and work comprehensively to tackle the menace.

By Issah Mohammed

The post Parties Reach Consensus On Vigilantism appeared first on DailyGuide Network.

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