Features
British High Commissioner: ‘Instigating a coup in Ghana?’

Mawuse Oliver Barker Vormawor, an apologist of the Opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), was on 12th May, 2022, arrested by the police and charged with careless and inconsiderate driving and non- observance of road markings.
Barker Vormawor is again an ‘acclaimed’ strategist and convener of #FixTheCountry Movement. The FixTheCountry movement claims to be using street protests to ‘force’ the Government to fix myriad of ‘contentious’ issues the country is facing .
He pleaded not guilty before a Magistrate court and was granted bail in the sum of GHC 30,000 with two sureties to be justified.
Barker Vormawor was arrested together with other motor traffic offenders during police patrol to check indiscipline and other motor traffic offences. Two other offending drivers who also appeared on the same day in court with him (Barker Vormawor) pleaded guilty and were sentenced to a fine of GH¢300 each.
The arrest and prosecution of Barker Vormawor seemed to have ‘fascinated’ the new British High Commissioner to Ghana, Harriet Thompson.
So, on Tuesday, 17th May 2022, the British High Commissioner tweeted:”Oliver Barker Vormawor, covener of #FixTheCountry movement, arrested again, I understand for a motoring offence on his way to court. I’ll be interested to see where this goes…”
Readers, remember? Barker Vormawor is currently being prosecuted on a charge of treason felony.
His first arrest and prosecution was in relation to a social media post in which he threatened to stage a coup if the E-levy Bill, then before Parliament, was passed into law.
According to the police, Barker Vormawor’s social media post, “contained a clear statement of intent with a possible will to execute a coup in his declaration of intent to subvert the Constitution of the Republic of Ghana.”
And without any provocation from the Ghana Armed Forces, Barker Vormawor described the Ghana Army as “useless” in his social media post.
According to Wikipedia, a coup d’etat (French), often shortened to ‘a coup’ in English or ‘overthrow’, is a seizure and removal of a government and its powers.
Typically, it is an illegal seizure of power by a political faction, rebel group, military or by a dictator.
Ghana’s Inspector General of Police (IGP), Dr George Akuffo Dampare, was ‘incensed’ by the British High Commissioner’s tweet, thus, describing it as “misguided, unwarranted and biased.”
In a ‘hot’ statement issued in response to Harriet Thompson’s tweet, the IGP said:”Ordinarily, the Ghana Police Service would not have responded to comments such as yours, obviously made from either a biased or uninformed position.
“However, we have learnt from previous painful experience that it has not been helpful to ignore such misguided, unwarranted and biased comments, intended to tarnish the reputation of the Ghana Police Service and that of our country.
“For the moment, we would recommend a Ghanaian saying, that might guide you in your diplomatic engagements; ‘di wo fie asem’, meaning – ‘learn to keep within the limits of what concerns you’ .
“What is more; we consider your tweet a violation of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961), which enjoins diplomatic missions not to interfere in the internal affairs of their host countries.”
Virtually lending support to the IGP’s statement, many Ghanaians have ‘chastised’ the British High Commissioner. For instance, Professor Ransford Gyampo, a political scientist and a senior lecturer at the University of Ghana says:”Ghana must be strict in calling out ignorant and low grade diplomats from other countries who unnecessarily poke their noses into the internal affairs of our country, which does not concern them.”
According to Professor Gyampo:”Ghanaian diplomats in other countries do not meddle in the internal affairs of their host countries, and I cannot fathom why it is the opposite in Ghana.
“Foreign diplomats who are of no relevance in their home countries and posted to Africa as punishment, cannot come and dictate to us.
“They should talk about the ills in their home countries first and confine themselves to their role as spies.”
Professor Gyampo added:”The fact that we receive aid doesn’t mean we must be puppets and tolerate diplomatic buffoonery.
“They exploit our natural resources and pay us pittance. They mine our gold and pay us only five per cent! They take our oil and pay us about 13 per cent!”
Professor Baffuor Agyeman-Duah, a governance expert and a former United Nations Senior Adviser shares similar views with Professor Gyampo. He also says;”we are a sovereign nation and there are diplomatic requirements when a nation engages another nation. When they send their diplomats, they are guided by the general convention.
“What some of our diplomatic officers here do, is to unduly poke their noses in our internal affairs.”
Others who “defend” the British High Commissioner, however, say the IGP should have conveyed his concerns about the tweet, to the British High Commissioner, through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration “and that the IGP went overboard and overstepped his limits.”
The “defendants” of the British High Commissioner claim that her comments were so “innocuous” that she did not deserve any reprimand “because she was only seeking information that could have been given to her without turning it into a ‘battle’.”
Questions being asked by some critics of the British High Commissioner include:”Has the new British High Commissioner been posted to Ghana to instigate a coup, using Barker Vormawor-led #FixTheCountry movement ?
“As a brand new High Commissioner in Ghana, why is Harriet Thompson ‘so much in love’ with somebody who has clearly stated that he will stage a coup to overthrow the Government of the Republic of Ghana?
“There are a lot of motor traffic offenders who have been arrested and are facing prosecution in the country; why is the British woman singling out Barker Vormawor for mention and attention ?
“With the E-levy passed into law, is the British High Commissioner encouraging Barker Vormawor to operationalise his intents of staging a coup and with covert support?
Thompson, British
“Is the British High Commissioner not very much aware that the American Embassy in Ghana played a major role in overthrowing Dr Kwame Nkrumah’s regime in 1966?”
Readers, can you also ‘smell’ ‘anything’ in the tweet of the British High Commissioner?
Contact email WhatsApp/ of author:
asmahfrankg@gmail.com (0505556179)
By G. Frank Asmah
Features
Traditional values an option for anti-corruption drive — (Part 1)
One of the issues we have been grappling with as a nation is corruption, and it has had such a devastating effect on our national development. I have been convinced that until morality becomes the foundation upon which our governance system is built, we can never go forward as a nation.
Our traditional practices, which have shaped our cultural beliefs, have always espoused values that have kept us along the straight and the narrow and have preserved our societies since ancient times.
These are values that frown on negative habits like stealing, cheating, greediness, selfishness, etc. Our grandparents have told us stories of societies where stealing was regarded as so shameful that offenders, when caught, have on a number of instances committed suicide.
In fact, my mother told me of a story where a man who was living in the same village as her mother (my grandmother), after having been caught stealing a neighbour’s cockerel, out of shame committed suicide on a mango tree. Those were the days that shameful acts were an abomination.
Tegare worship, a traditional spiritual worship during which the spirit possesses the Tegare Priest and begins to reveal secrets, was one of the means by which the society upheld African values in the days of my grandmother and the early childhood days of my mother.
Those were the days when the fear of being killed by Tegare prevented people from engaging in anti-social vices. These days, people sleeping with other people’s wives are not uncommon.
These wrongful behaviour was not countenanced at all by Tegare. One was likely going to lose his life on days that Tegare operates, and so unhealthy habits like coveting your neighbour’s wife was a taboo.
Stealing of other people’s farm produce, for instance, could mean certain death or incapacitation of the whole or part of the body in the full glare of everybody. People realised that there were consequences for wrongdoing, and this went a long way to motivate the society to adhere to right values.
Imagine a President being sworn into office and whoever administers the oath says, “Please say this after me: I, Mr. …., do solemnly swear by God, the spirits of my ancestors and the spirits ruling in Ghana, that should I engage in corrupt acts, may I and my family become crippled, may madness become entrenched in my family, may incurable sicknesses and diseases be my portion and that of my family, both immediate and extended.”
Can you imagine a situation where a few weeks afterwards the President goes to engage in corrupt acts and we hear of his sudden demise or incapacitation and confessing that he engaged in corrupt acts before passing or before the incapacitation—and the effect it will have on his successor? I believe we have to critically examine this option to curb corruption.
My grandmother gave me an eyewitness account of one such encounter where a woman died instantly after the Tegare Priest had revealed a wrong attitude she had displayed during the performance on one of the days scheduled for Tegare spirit manifestation.
According to her story, the Priest, after he had been possessed by the spirit, declared that for what the woman had done, he would not forgive her and that he would kill. Instantly, according to my grandmother, the lady fell down suddenly and she died—just like what happened to Ananias and his wife Sapphira in Acts Chapter 5.
NB: ‘CHANGE KOTOKA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT TO KOFI BAAKO
By Laud Kissi-Mensah
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Features
Emotional distortions:A lethal threat to mental health
Emotional distortions can indeed have a profound impact on an individual’s mental health and well-being. These distortions can lead to a range of negative consequences, including anxiety, depression, and impaired relationships.
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A path towards healing
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BY ROBERT EKOW GRIMMOND-THOMPSON