Rev. John Ntim Fordjour, MP for Assin South and Ranking Member of Parliament’s Defence and Interior Committee, has laid out serious allegations against the ruling NDC. He accuses them of illegally seizing state lands and mass firing public sector workers—acts he warns erode public trust and fuel widespread discontent.
Alleged State Land Grabs
Former Defence Minister Dominic Nitiwul previously claimed that the NDC “has sold more state lands to private individuals than the NPP,” suggesting widespread cronyism and irregular transactions during past administration periods—all tied to the party’s entrenched practices.
Fordjour builds on that narrative, warning that land sequestration under NDC rule isn’t a thing of the past—it’s continuing with impunity. Though he hasn’t named specific sites, his broader charge positions the party at the center of a legacy of state land misuse.
Mass Terminations at Play
Alongside land grievances, Fordjour strongly criticizes what he calls “mass terminations”—dismissals of civil servants without just cause. He warns that such sweeping firings could place the NDC “on the highway to opposition,” as affected workers lose both jobs and livelihoods.
He frames this issue less as partisan rivalry and more as a people’s issue. For him, it’s not about political survival, but about standing with ** hardworking Ghanaians who have been unfairly purged** from public service.
Why It Matters
- Trust in governance: Seizing public land and terminating workers without transparency damages citizen confidence.
- Economic impact: Dismissed workers lose their means; displaced farmers lose land—either way, families pay the price.
- Rule of law: Recurring claims of land disposal need scrutiny; courts and oversight bodies should step in.
What Fordjour Wants
- A full investigation into land sales and dismissals, driven by institutions like the Auditor-General and Parliament’s oversight committees.
- Restoration of dismissed workers where applicable—or fair severance.
- Public consultation before land transactions, especially those involving former state properties.
Conclusion
Rev. Ntim Fordjour’s critique cuts beyond party politics—he’s issuing a warning. Land justice, worker rights, transparent governance: these aren’t political chips to be traded. If allegations are true, they signify a critical betrayal of public trust. Ghana’s institutions now need to respond—not with rhetoric, but with evidence.