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As a concerned citizen and observer of Ghana’s political landscape, I wish to issue a strong personal admonition to members, communicators, and sympathizers of the National Democratic Congress (NDC): do not allow yourselves to be drawn into the unfolding saga involving the suspended Chief Justice. The latest calls by Majority Leader Hon. Alexander Afenyo-Markin for the Attorney-General and the President to publicly respond to the claims made by the suspended Chief Justice are not borne out of a genuine quest for transparency. Rather, they are strategic diversions—part of a trap to drag opposition voices, especially the NDC, into a fight that was neither started nor shaped by them. Let it be stated clearly: This is not the NDC’s war. It is a power struggle within the architecture of a government that has systematically weakened independent institutions. The Judiciary, the Executive, and their appendages must answer for their own contradictions. I urge the NDC and its communicators to: Resist all bait to comment prematurely or emotionally on the matter. Avoid legitimizing a failing system by appearing to take sides in this internal wrangling. Redirect national focus to the core issues of economic hardship, widespread corruption, unemployment, and democratic decline. Maintain strategic silence and focus on preparing for governance, not on providing commentary that may be twisted for propaganda. At this stage, any attempt to meddle in or sensationalize this matter will not serve the cause of accountability. It will only offer the opposition the opportunity to nurture and grow public frustration. Let them clean up their own mess. Let the system they manipulated now deal with its own crisis. The NDC must stay focused, disciplined, and alert.

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