Fresh from his endorsement of Nana Akufo-Addo for the 2016 presidential
elections, outspoken gospel musician Cwesi Oteng has gone a step further
to explain his decision.
The God Dey Bless Me singer had on September 10, 2016 announced to the
world via his Twitter handle his support for the three-time presidential
aspirant of the opposition New Patriotic Party. He tweeted: “I would
like to show my support for @NAkufoAddo and to fully endorse him to be
our next POGH. I believe Ghana needs a breath of fresh air.”
Appearing on Gospel 360 on Accra100.5FM on Sunday, September 18 – a week
after the public endorsement – Cwesi Oteng, who maintained he was no
member of any political party, reiterated his backing of Nana Akufo-Addo
saying he had made the decision as a “citizen” and a “millennial” after
his assessment of the Better Ghana agenda promised by the governing
National Democratic Congress (NDC) in the two terms it has been in power
since the NPP left office.
“I am a citizen of Ghana; I am not a politician. Ghana was promised a
Better Ghana. As a Ghanaian citizen, I’ve studied the system and I’ve
said that: ‘OK, if this is the Better Ghana, eight years is enough; I’m
voting for the NPP,” he told host Andy Favoured on the Sunday afternoon
show.
Asked why he had settled on the twice-failed presidential aspirant when
there were several opposition candidates to pick from, Cwesi Oteng,
certain Nana Akufo-Addo was best placed to challenge John Mahama for the
presidency, said: “I do not want to waste [my] vote. It is good to
support others but I do not want to waste [my] vote, so Nana is going
[to be my choice].”
Further, he noted that though Mr Akufo-Addo had never led Ghana, the
country’s history could not be written without reference to his
relentless efforts as a “forerunner” to restore it to democratic
governance during the years of military rule.
He explained: “Nana has not been president of Ghana yet, but write the
history of Ghana. If you can remove him from [it], it’s not correct
history, because Ghana used to be a military-ruled country before we
came [under] constitutional rule. I do not remember any of the current
faces fighting for Ghana to come out of military rule.
“My point is that if a person who without political authority as
president of the state has been able to etch himself into the history
books of our country, what will this person do if he is the president of
the state?”
SOURCE : classfmonline.com
Monday, 19 September 2016
Ghana needs Akufo-Addo – Cwesi Oteng
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