Victor Smith Cautions Kofi Adams

His Excellency, Ambassador Victor Smith, has cautioned Mr. Kofi Adams, Special Aide to Former President Rawlings against inflaming passion within the NDC by spreading untruths. Reacting to comments attributed to Mr. Adams about a tape on the Ya-Na�s murder, Victor Smith said Kofi Adams should have taken the trouble to find out what was recorded on it before going public to talk about it. While in Tamale last Friday with former First Lady, Nana Konadu Agyemang-Rawlings, Mr. Kofi Adams told the media that a tape that was made available to Former President Rawlings by a son of the late Ya Na was handed over to the Mills government by Victor Smith to aide it nab the killers of the Ya Na. According to Kofi Adams, the tape had faces that would aide investigators to identify who masterminded the death of the Ya Na and as such, the government has no excuse for being unable to bring the perpetrators to book so far. However, in an interview with the Daily Post, Ambassador Victor Smith, who was the Former Special Aide to Rawlings said to the best of his knowledge, there was no tape with faces on it that could lead investigators to the killers. Throwing light on the tape, Ambassador Smith said the tape Kofi Adams referred to was a recording he made of the narratives of a nephew of the Ya Na about the events on the fateful day the Gbewaa Palace was attacked and the Ya Na murdered. He handed over the tape to the Deputy Attorney-General, Barton Oduro so he would be privy to the eye witness� account of the murder of the Ya Na. Ambassador Smith said it was therefore not true that a son of the late Ya Na made the tape and handed it over to Rawlings. What is more, there were no faces on the tape that would aide investigations to arrive at those who could have masterminded the killings. PS: The editor of the Daily Post (then called the National Democrat) watched the recording of tape being taliked about in the office of Victor Smith then at Ridge in 2004. The entire recording was of Nantomah Andani, a nephew of the late Ya Na narrating what happened on the fateful day the Ya Na was attacked. Nantomah, who said he was at the Gbewaa Palace with the Ya Na and others explained how they were informed that some members of the Abudu Gate were on their way to attack the Gbewaa Palace, how the Ya Na tried to avert it, the attack itself, the realization that the attackers were being assisted by mercenaries, why and how he and others escaped from the palace, the refusal of the Ya Na to escape, where he hid after his escape, his identification of the mercenaries who were aiding the attackers and how he later saw the body of one of the mercenaries later at the morgue. The monologue by Nantomah, according to the editor lasted, for almost two hours. During the monologue, the eye witness showed areas on his body where he still had bullets as a result of the gun-shots during the attack on the Gbewa Palace. The only other person who appeared in the film was Mr. Gomda, who brought Nantomah to the office of Victor Smith and sat by him throughout the interview.