Pratt: I Feel So Embarrassed And Ashamed�Is This The Same NDC?

Managing Editor of the Insight newspaper, Kwesi Pratt Jnr, has called on President Mills to act immediately by going to the rescue of the Director of the Ghana Atomic Energy Commission (GAEC) and some security personnel of the commission who were rounded up by the police on Monday for allegedly causing unlawful damage to the property of a construction firm, Anaina International Company Limited, at Kwabenya in Accra. He said it is embarrassing and disgraceful that the State will support a foreign company to take over state lands as against citizens of the country. He was commenting on the arrest of Professor Edward Akaho and some 38 other workers for alleged acts of vandalism and arson on Peace FM�s �Kokrokoo� Morning Show. The senior journalist said he feels ashamed that the NDC is engaged in the same vice it accused the NPP of when they were in opposition regarding the sale of state property. �The sale of state lands is dirty and I feel so embarrassed and ashamed. I remember what we said when some government appointees under the NPP bought state lands and bungalows. I also vividly recall the campaign some officials of this current NDC administration and myself waged in 2006-2008 against the NPP on the sale of government properties, and look at what is happening now?�.I am so ashamed and I wonder whether it is the same NDC we joined hands with against the NPP when they were grabbing state properties? Have they forgotten so soon? And even if they have, are they unaware that Ghanaians will go to the polls again? This is shocking!� he said. The GAEC Boss had earlier openly admitted to Peace FM that he authorized the security personnel to demolish and set fire to a sale point office structure and other properties belonging to Anaina. The GAEC and the private company Anainia, are both laying claim to a 700,000 square meter land in the Legon-Atomic enclave area. Contributing to discussions on the subject, Kwesi Pratt condemned the arrest of the GAEC Director and the land dispute between the commission and the Chinese company and also expressed disappointment at the NDC for giving out state property as compensation to individuals who have been wronged by the government. �Not too long ago, a government bungalow was transferred to a private person as compensation because a particular road under construction had affected portions of his land. It took us three publications (in subsequent editions of the Insight newspaper) to get a reaction and the response we received was so annoying; where are we heading to as a country if government bungalows are given out as a form of compensation for a piece of land that a road construction affects? If we had given out government bungalows as compensation from 1957, do you think there would have been any left by now?� he quizzed.