I Will Concede Defeat After Independent Audit Of Results - Mahama

I Will Concede Defeat After Independent Audit Of Results - Mahama

 

 

John Mahama says an independent audit of the EC's election figures is necessary to settle the tensions over the election results. With the incompetence, the EC has shown, it will be useful for us to do a forensic audit of the EC’s own systems and numbers to come to what the final number from the EC is, Mr. Mahama said in an interview with VOA News. This election she can’t even

 

get the results right. The declaration is all over the place, he added. The credibility of the results released by the electoral management body has also been questioned by some observers following the revision of the total valid votes declared by the EC on December 9, 2020, where EC Chairperson, Jean Mensa, announced wrong figures. Subsequent communiques from the EC

 

 

also contained some numerical errors. Though Mr. Mahama notably became the first incumbent to lose an election in Ghana and subsequently conceded, he said the lapses his party has noted cannot be overlooked. The way they have conducted this election; government, President Akufo-Addo and the Electoral Commission, is a dent to our democratic credentials. He stressed that

 

 

the audit is necessary to bring closure to this by seeing exactly where the issues are. Mahama however assured that if the independent audit done by the Commission is satisfactory I’ll be the first to concede and walk away. As long as that is not done and we know there was a deliberate attempt to subvert the will of the people in favour of the incumbent, it will be wrong for me to just

 

 

leave it because we will not learn the lessons of this election. In the meantime, the NDC has been carrying out an audit of all presidential pink sheets The party maintains that the facts and figures available to it from pink sheets and other evidence across the country shows that there was an attempt to manipulate the results of the election in favour of the incumbent President.