The opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) has fired back at the government of President John Dramani Mahama, condemning the arrest and remand of one of its communicators, Baba Amando, as a calculated act of political persecution and a blatant misuse of state power.

Speaking at a press conference in Accra on April 15, 2026, the party’s National Organiser, Henry Nana Boakye, painted a troubling picture of what he described as a deliberate campaign to silence and intimidate opposition voices. His words were measured but sharp, carrying the weight of a party that believes it is fighting not just for one man, but for the soul of democratic governance in Ghana.

According to Boakye, the ordeal began on April 13, when Baba Amando, accompanied by his lawyer, voluntarily honoured a police invitation in Sunyani,  a gesture of cooperation that, in the NPP’s view, should have set the tone for a fair and transparent process. Instead, what followed was anything but. Amando was transferred to Accra, with police citing vague “orders from above” as justification,  a phrase the party found deeply alarming.

The situation took a further turn when, despite being granted police bail and asked to report the following day, Amando was arraigned before court and remanded in custody. Most striking, the NPP noted, was the fact that the prosecution itself did not oppose bail,  making the court’s decision to remand him all the more difficult to justify. Boakye did not hold back in his assessment of the Presiding Judge, accusing the court of judicial overreach and describing the remand order as entirely unwarranted.

For the NPP, Amando’s case does not stand alone. Boakye drew a direct line between this arrest and the recent detention of NPP Bono Regional Chairman, Kwame Baffoe Abronye, arguing that the two incidents are not isolated events but part of a broader, more sinister pattern,  a systematic targeting of opposition figures by a government increasingly willing to weaponise state institutions against its critics.

Central to the NPP’s accusations is the alleged involvement of the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO), which the party claims is being deployed not to fight crime, but to stifle dissent. The party warned that such actions pose a serious threat to free speech and civil liberties, values it insists must be protected regardless of political affiliation.

The NPP’s demands were unambiguous: an immediate review of the remand order, an end to the politicisation of law enforcement agencies, and a formal investigation by the Chief Justice into the conduct of the court in this matter. The party also issued a broader challenge to the Mahama administration, urging it to redirect its energy toward the real issues confronting Ghanaians,  soaring unemployment, a rising cost of living, and crumbling infrastructure,  rather than what it described as a relentless pursuit of political enemies.

As the dust settles on what has become one of the more charged political episodes of the year, one thing is clear: the NPP has drawn a line in the sand, and it intends to fight back.

Source: Apexnewsgh.com

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