Monday, October 27, 2014

SECRET RECORDINGS: EXPANDING THE FRONTIERS OF POLITICAL MISCHIEF

Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Saturday October 25, 2014

The era of secret recordings appear to have come to stay and it is messing up everybody. It is clearly expanding the frontiers of political mischief.

It is said that one’s ‘freedom of speech’ ends at another person’s ‘right to freedom of peace and tranquility’. However, both rights are severely curtailed when one’s freedom to privacy and ‘secrecy’ is disrespected by others.

Clearly, every Ghanaian has a right to privacy as enshrined in the 1992 Constitution of Ghana. However, this critical constitutional provision seems to be endangered by the release of so-called secret tape recordings that have rocked the nation of late.

Interestingly, it heightens when we are in the political season preparing for general elections. This clearly suggests that it is the politicians who are behind most of the recordings of their opponents. They run quickly to their friendly media especially the radio stations and try to ‘destroy’ you once and for all. Even in instances where it becomes obvious that you are not the one whose voice is being aired, they foist it on you using their ‘hawkers’ popularly called social commentators sometimes aided by quack journalists.

In fact, it is only in the Ghanaian political landscape that an accuser is forcibly asked to prove his/her guilt or otherwise. The media, particularly radio has allowed itself to be used as conduit for the propagation of this act whether atrocious or unalarming.

In the era of technology where gadgets have become sophisticated, you do not take your interactions with others for granted. I mean, your security should never be compromised because you do not know who is recording your conversation. Once the radio stations highlight it, trust the propaganda tabloids to feed on it the next day.

We have witnessed disturbing trends in such acts but nobody including the Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) whose members are fronting such ungodly operations or the regulator National Media Commission (NMC) seems to have found antidote to these things, not even the courts!

Some of these recordings have shaken the foundations of our fledgling democracy and impaired the expansion of the frontiers of media freedom.
Dou you remember the secret recordings of Atta Akyea, MP for Abuakwa South, Baba Jamal a deputy Minister and MP for Akwatia, Anthony A.  Karbo former NPP Youth Organizer, Kofi Adams Spokes person for former President Rawlings, Yaw Boateng Gyan NDC National Organizer, Sammy Awuku NPP Youth Organizer, Victoria Hammah the sacked Deputy Minister of Communications, Minority leader Osei-Kyei Mensah Bonsu among others?

Atta Akyea’s troubles
In lawyer Atta Akyea’s case, Radio Gold’s ‘The Gold Power Drive’ on Friday, December 21, 2008 in the heat of the elections, aired a tape that some NPP stalwarts (Atta Akyea and Alhaji Malik) where they were contemplating on why a judge who adjudicated a case had ruled in favour of the Electoral Commission while giving them the indication that he was on their side when they spoke to him prior to the ruling. The MP never got the chance to clear himself even though the NDC used the information for propaganda purposes for many months.

Baba Jamal’s ‘Black & White’
Baba Jamal’s tape of August 2011 brought heated debate. Do you remember the ‘Say white when it is black’ tape attributed to, then Deputy Minister of Information and now with Local Government? He was caught on tape luring a group of journalists to 'kill' stories which will negatively affect the government and rather highlight the positive ones. Allegedly recorded at Bolgatanga, Baba Jamal was supposedly heard telling the journalists that they had been put on National Youth Employment Programme (NYEP) now GYEEDA payroll and that they would be paid monthly for dancing to the tune of the government. He came back fighting hard, saying that that the series of such tapes were the handiwork of the NPP and were being circulated to impugn the integrity of himself and other government officials.

Fonkar Games
Kofi Adams was also a victim in 2011. It would be recalled that a tape recording emerged after the Get Atta Mills Elected (GAME) and Friends Of Nana Konadu Agyemang Rawlings (FONKAR) contest in Sunyani where the late President John Evans Atta Mills retained the 2012 flagbearership position with 97% win over Mrs Rawlings who later broke away to form a new party called the National Democratic Party (NDP) on account of claims of being cheated at the polls in Sunyani.

Karbo’s cross
Anthony Karbo was allegedly caught on a secret tape planning to recruit mercenaries for purposes of the December 2012 general elections. It had been brought up by the defunct NDC ultra group Research and Advocacy Platform (RAP) led by Felix Kwakye Ofosu who is now a deputy minister and sent to the Police CID for investigation. Karbo denied the voice in the tape, saying it was a manipulation but the NDC would not accept the defence of the NPP members.

Yaw Boateng Gyan ‘police’
National Organizer of the ruling NDC, Yaw Boateng-Gyan was also heard on a secret tape conspiring to hire thugs to disrupt the December 7, 2012 general elections. Indeed, the exposé in the tape caused intense fear and panic among Ghanaians because Mr. Boateng-Gyan was heard hatching plans to use the thugs to infiltrate the security agencies.

In the controversial tape, the NDC organizer was heard confirming high-level governmental support for the activities of the thugs who would be conscripted to pose as security operatives during the election. Their modus operandi would be to cause mayhem during the elections in a bid to favour the ruling party. When the tape went viral in August 2012, a clearly shaken Boateng-Gyan publicly admitted that the voice indeed belonged to him. He also admitted to the diabolic plans attributed to him in the tape, but tried to diffuse impact of the content.

Sammy Awuku on air
In August 2013, an alleged leaked secret audio tape of Sammy Awuku was aired by pro NDC radio stations. A male voice, purported to be that of the enterprising young politician was heard telling some party communicators in the UK that the party’s ‘attacks’ on the nine-member panel of the Supreme Court hearing the landmark election petition had been ‘targeted at a particular individual’.

He later reacted in a statement: “I state very emphatically that the said tape and whatever by-products arising are totally fabricated and doctored and that I have never made the kinds of statements contained in the said tape anywhere. I know absolutely nothing about it and I would entreat the general public and the media to treat the supposed tape with the contempt it deserves.”

Vikileaks scandal
In November last year, a tape which came to be known as Vikileaks and which more or less ended Victoria Hammah’s political career was played variously by the media. On the said tape she was heard telling a female interlocutor that she will quit politics as soon as she was able to make at least $1 Million. On the same tape, the then Deputy Communications Minister, was heard saying Gender, Children and Social Protection Minister, Nana Oye Lithur who is wife of the President’s Lawyer, Tony Lithur, in the election petition hearing, might have influenced the final verdict on the election petition case. The expose’ ended the young lady’s ministerial ambition when she was subsequently sacked by the President.

Intra party scuffle
Sometimes, the battle is fought internally among party members and the urge to ‘destroy an enemy within’ has always been very high. Recent so-called secret tape recordings of Mohammed Amin Anta and Minority Leader Osei-Kyei Mensah Bonsu in the run up to the just-ended NPP flagbearership primary point to that fact.

Amin Anta’s voice
Amin Anta was recorded on a tape saying that Nana Akufo-Addo gave him US$5,000 and offered him three positions to choose from. He later reacted and said it was being facilitated by the NPP flagbearer’s opponents who were dazed by the overwhelming endorsement he (Nana Akufo-Addo) was receiving from the NPP fraternity.

Minority Leader
Minority Leader Osei-Kyei Mensah Bonsu was not spared either, he was said to have criticised people close to Nana Akufo-Addo, for displaying extravagant lifestyle in the run-up to the 2012 elections. On a secret audio recording which was aired variously, the Minority Leader alleged that some people around Nana Akufo-Addo spent lavishly during the campaign when the candidate was modest. He later reacted, describing it as mischievous.

NDC Minister shouts NPP slogan
Deputy Easter Regional Minister Mavis Ama Frimpong has had her share of this unholy practice when she was recorded secretly at an NDC meeting in Koforidua. She was caught on tape as chanting “Kukurudu!” the slogan of her party’s bitterest rival NPP. The incident occurred when she was addressing a meeting organised by the National Democratic Congress (NDC) as part of the campaign for NDC Chairman Dr. Kwabena Adjei who is seeking re-election.

She later threatened to invoke Antoa Nyamaa, the dreaded river deity on her attackers ostensibly to clear her name.

Living in denial
Almost all the people attributed on the tapes have denied except a few. Yaw Boateng Gyan was able to admit that it was his voice but denied all the motives behind the recordings even though it was clear he was gathering thugs to disrupt the 2012 general elections. Amin Anta also admitted recognized his voice on the tape but also rejected the motive behind it.

Security agencies indifference
Curiously, the security hierarchy do not seem to see anything wrong with the content of the tapes especially when it involves a member of the ruling party. Then National Security Coordinator, Larry Gbevlo Lartey, shockingly dismissed the Yaw Boateng Gyan tape, saying it was not worth his while. However, anytime a member from the opposition party was caught on tape, the security agencies made frantic efforts to investigate the matter even if there has not been any complaint as it should. Conversely, when the tape is about a member of the NDC, the same agencies especially National Security and the Police CID develop cold feet and show clear indifference.

Stemming the tide
Godfred Yeboah Dame, an attorney at the Akufo-Addo Chambers in Accra, offered his expert advice on the secret recording saga saying even though there are strict rules of people’s privacy as a constitutional right, the Ghanaian legal system simply has not seen enough precedents to tackle the abuse of covert recordings of private or public personalities. He says the acceptance of such evidence from secret tape recordings becomes a dicey call for judges.

“Some courts may say that however the evidence was brought in, it is still valid, whether the evidence was stolen or not, it is still evidence,” he said, adding, “Many courts are however leaning towards the protection of privacy,” he said. 

According to Lawyer Dame, even security personnel require special court orders to be able to listen in to people’s conversations Apparently, the politicians know the complex legal technicalities involved in using evidence from covert operations to prosecute anybody, so at the moment, they freely use the tool to deal irreparable damages to their opponents.

Some have described the perpetrators as ‘irresponsible’ – that is if you are affected by the expose’ or there is damage to your reputation - while others who are in favour of such acts have called it ‘the evils men do in our society’. Can we trust their motive especially when the majority of these tapes only seem to indict or undo one political bigwig or the other?

Many so-called secret recordings might pop up as the political temperature rises but with their credibility now experiencing a nose-dive their days are definitely numbered as tools of political mischief.




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