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Kwame Nkrumah was only an invitee, he was not the founder of Ghana- Mike Ocquaye

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The Speaker of Parliament, Professor Mike Aaron Ocquaye says Ghana’s first President, Dr Kwame Nkrumah cannot be credited as the founder of the Republic of Ghana.

According to him, Dr Nkrumah was rather an invited to join the United Gold Coast Convention (UGCC) to wrestle power from the British.

Speaking at a Founder’s Day Celebrations yesterday Tuesday August 4, 2020, Professor Ocquaye said “if any one tells you they [UGCC] did not win independence, and that it was after a certain arrival [Dr Nkrumah] that independence fell on the agenda, it was a palpable false”

“Because from the constitution and from the day on 4th August 1947, it shows clearly that there were men of God who were poised to lead this country and for that matter ready to govern we Africans without Nkrumah and later with Nkrumah as a leading player of the UGCC, collectively worked for the good of this country”, he explained.

He continued “that day the UGCC was inaugurated, incidentally Nkrumah was not in Ghana. When he came, he became a prominent part of it.”

“With all due respect the invitee cannot become the founder”, he pointed out.

“They invited him to come and participate because of his skill in organization…he played a key role”, he added.

“He cannot exclude them [members of UGCC] and say he came and founded it”, he mentioned.

The argument regarding who founded Ghana will continue till thy kingdom come.

Many Ghanaians still believe Dr Nkrumah was the sole founder of Ghana, winning independence on 6th March, 1957.

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