In a riveting press conference that sent shockwaves through Ghana’s political landscape, Hon. Tampuli, the indomitable Ranking Member of Parliament’s Constitutional and Legal Affairs Committee, stepped up on behalf of the minority caucus to deliver a scathing indictment of the NDC government. With the fire of a revolutionary in his eyes, he laid bare what he called the “anatomy of a grand conspiracy”—a meticulously orchestrated campaign by the ruling regime to sabotage, neutralize, and utterly destroy the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP), the one institution daring to hold the powerful accountable.
“The NDC,” Tampuli thundered, his voice echoing through the packed media room in Accra, “is waging a deliberate war to emasculate any alternative voice that threatens their grip on power. This isn’t mere politics; it’s a calculated assault to damage the OSP’s credibility and shield their cronies from the corruption they’re drowning in.” He painted a vivid picture of shadowy NDC operatives pulling strings behind the scenes, deploying state machinery like a weaponized mafia to undermine the OSP—Parliament’s crowning achievement in the fight against graft. Institutions like the OSP, he stressed, were birthed by lawmakers precisely to operate free from executive meddling, a bulwark against the very impunity now on brazen display.
But Tampuli didn’t stop at rhetoric. He dropped a bombshell timeline, pinpointing April 15, 2026, at the High Court in Accra as the smoking gun—the “leather” (the raw, unfiltered evidence) of this insidious campaign. “That day,” he declared, “the world will see the NDC’s mask slip. Leaked documents, witness testimonies, and judicial records will expose how they’ve rigged the system to bury corruption probes targeting their inner circle. This is their Watergate moment, and we’re not letting them get away with it.”
The minority caucus, Tampuli vowed, stands as the people’s vanguard—unbought, unbowed, and ready to flood the streets, courts, and airwaves with irrefutable proof. Critics from the NDC side have already cried foul, labeling it “baseless fearmongering,” but Tampuli fired back: “Call it what you want; history will judge you as the architects of Ghana’s moral decay.” As supporters erupted in cheers and detractors seethed online, the address has polarized the nation, with #SaveTheOSP trending nationwide and calls for an independent probe mounting.
Source: Collins Owusu Debrah
