A member of Alan Kyetematen’s Movement for Change, Yaw Buaben Asamoa, has revealed that the decision by Alan to resign from the New Patriotic Party (NPP) was a divine instruction from God.
He claimed that the party became one that was hijacked by a select few whose main aim was to intimidate others for their selfish interests.
He indicated that the NPP was no longer a party that believed in transparency, accountability, and democracy.
Speaking in an exclusive interview with Dr. Ren on Rainbow Radio 92.4FM, he said the party has accepted corruption, autocracy, and maltreatment of others who stood for the principles on which the party was established.
He told the host that God instructed Alan to step aside from the party after the presidential primary because he would make him the next president of the republic.
He was responding to a question on how the gang of four of which he was part was formed.
In explaining, he said that after Alan decided to step aside, he (Buaben Asamoa), Hopeson Adorye, Ohene Ntow, and Abubakar Saddique decided to go along with him.
”The principles of accountability, truth, and transparency were the key ideologies on which the Movement for Change was established. There were leaders in the NPP who hijacked the party and did not want the right thing to be done. They intimidated others who stood up to them and were autocratic in whatever they did.
They were using deception, autocracy, and intimidation to govern and do things. That was why God instructed Alan to set aside aside and set up the Movement for Change.”
He went on to state that the NPP has departed from the way it elects leaders to represent the party in elections.
He lamented that the party no longer cares about the competence, integrity, and incorruptibility of the person being elected.
He said that although he was born into the party and his father made other family members part of the formation of the NPP, he believes it has lost its way and there is no way he could be part of the current state of the NPP.
By: Rainbowradioonline com/Ghana