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Bono Regional Chairman of the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP), Kwame Baffoe, alias Abronye DC, has announced he is starting a personal vendetta against Inspector General of Police (IGP) George Akuffo-Dampare.
The NPP loose cannon announced the feud after he was granted bail by an Accra Circuit Court over his wild coup d’état claim that former President John Mahama had teamed up with Al Qaeda and Boko Haram to stage a coup in Ghana.
“Actually, I have been advised by my Counsel not to respond to this populist arrest by the IGP. I think the next court date is on the 9th,” the foul-mouth Abronye stated.
“But what I will like to say is that no amount of these populist incarcerations will injunct me from voicing out or speaking my mind. In the coming days, from tomorrow going I will come out with some personal issues that I have with the IGP which has nothing to do with this particular case,” he told journalists after he was granted bail on Wednesday.
According to him, the IGP, who has been a hit with Ghanaians because of an era of discipline he has brought to policing in the country is populist. “I use the word populist because the exercise of the IGP for some months now has been described as populist and the same has been happening to me.”
Abronye DC was accompanied by another notorious NPP hatchet man, Hopeson Adorye, whom an alleged lesbian girlfriend of President Akufo-Addo, Serwaa Broni, had accused of robbing her at gunpoint and ransacked her hotel room for sex videos and photos that Akufo-Addo feared would leak.
According to Hopeson Adorye, the IGP’s arrest of Abronye was out of a personal vendetta because the IGP had asked Abronye to help him with a campaign but Abronye had refused.
“As for this thing, it is obvious that it is a personal thing. The Police after an arrest can give a suspect bail but for IGP to state that unless the court, I mean it is not well…I am in government I can’t run the Police down, they are doing well. But personal interest should not supersede the national interest. It is personal, he has personal issues with Abronye,” said Adorye.
“If you ask Abronye to help you do a campaign and he refuses does that mean you should have issues with him,” Hopeson Adorye said.
Meanwhile, Abronye DC was granted bail in the sum of ¢100,000 with two sureties.
He had been put before Circuit Court on Wednesday after being charged with publication of false news, offensive conduct conducive to breach of peace.