If you thought you knew what was wrong with the NPP, that they’re handling a purely internal matter with a very juvenile style, and that resorting to senseless violence to solve a political issue is a pretty stupid thing to do- then prepare to be proven wrong.
National Women’s Organiser of the party Otiko Djaba, believes what’s plaguing them is a ‘spiritual bomb’. Speaking on Citi FM, she said their enemies are at the centre of the problem, and that a ‘demon of confusion’ is leading to all their troubles.
“We [NPP members] must learn to forgive each other, we must understand that this is a spiritual bomb, there are enemies all around us infiltrating our rights, the demon of confusion is here.
NPP is in the hands of God, we say our battle is the Lord’s so this is the time to seek God’s guidance and counsel.
Our enemies think that they have a reason to gloat over our political woes but I am saying that we will rise again and even in this darkness our battle is the Lord’s.
Let’s reflect and rebuild and restore hope for the many Ghanaians who are looking to us for leadership”
Dodging responsibility, blaming external forces- classic Ghanaian ways of explaining a crisis- it never leads to a concrete solution to the problem being reached.
I hope they’re really exploring avenues of solving this issue; otherwise what has been a very trying week just went from bad to worse.
Oh Ghana! SMH….
Superstitious fools! Intellectually and logically bankrupt minds.
You have a clear case of greed and factionalism, which has its roots in tribalism. If this is how the so called educated and leadership elite continue to analyse problems then as a people we are doomed.
Why do Ghanaians read superstition into everything? Why can’t we ever look at problems logically and use logical reasoning to identity the root cause of problem and find solutions?
Until we rid ourselves of superstitious nonsense we will never solve any problems and rather create more problems for ourselves.
This is the root cause of all our problems. Ignorance combined with superstition.