Mwalimu Adesanmi, here is wishing you a Prosperous New You! The way the mixture of snow and freezing rain is beating us here, the sky may soon fall.---:) If I recall correctly, didn't Mugabe's wahala begin with the tiff between him and the former colonial master?
Professor Mills gave his opponents an opportunity to begin their campaign now, and the Brits may end up supporting them come the next election, just like they did in Zim. Prof's position simply contradicts his State of the Union Address and other pronouncements. The question I have for the prof is the following: If he is so opposed to the legitimate force option, why has he not gone to see his campaign financier who has been sending Ivorian jets to his airport (only God knows the amount of wealth being sent in those jets), Gbagbo, to stand down and go live in Ghana?
----- Original Message -----From: Pius AdesanmiSent: 1/26/2011 12:13:26 PMSubject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Atta Mills' Reelection Is Already InJeopardy Over Cote d'Ivoire
The-sky-is-falling-Mwalimu-Bangura:
Pray, where in this report is any threat to Atta Mills's re-election mentioned? Are you preparing for a possible move to FOX News?
Pius
--- On Tue, 25/1/11, Abdul Bangura <theai@earthlink.net> wrote:
From: Abdul Bangura <theai@earthlink.net>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Atta Mills' Reelection Is Already In Jeopardy Over Cote d'Ivoire
To: "USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com" <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Cc: "leonenet" <leonenet@lists.umbc.edu>
Date: Tuesday, 25 January, 2011, 22:16
Ghana accuses BBC of perpetrating mischief19:34, January 25, 2011
--Alhaji Mohammed Mumuni, Ghana's foreign affairs minister, on Monday accused the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) of perpetrating mischief through deliberate misrepresentation of statements made by President John Evans Atta Mills on the Ivorian political crisis.
The minister also accused the broadcaster of trying to create hostilities for President Mills and Ghana in Africa and in the West African sub region.
Mills, at a recent meeting with senior journalists at the presidency, said Ghana was mindful of the volatility of the Ivorian crisis but would be mind full of an "Akan"(local language ) adage "dzi wo fie asem", to wit, "mind your own business".
The BBC, on its Network Africa Program on Friday, January 22, quoted President Mills' comment as a wise saying for the day which subjected Mills to numerous criticisms from listeners through calls and text messages.
In an interview to Xinhua, Alhaji Mumuni emphasized that the BBC was unfair when it represented President Mills as a self- centered and inward looking person who did not care about the crisis in Cote d'Ivoire.
"Indeed the BBC quoted President Mills out of context." he said the context in which the president made that comment was completely disregarded.
"They ignored the several indications he made that he was extremely concerned about the conditions in Ivory Coast (Cote d'Ivoire) and created the impression that our president is a self- centered, inward looking and selfish man who doesn't really care about what is happening in Ivory Coast (Cote d'Ivoire). In fact, there is abundance of evidence to show that it is not true."
The minister said President Mills wanted the Cote d'Ivoire problem to be handled with absolute diplomatic care to avert the situation which would lead to an outbreak of violence.
He said the president referred that the Ivorian crisis was an African problem which demanded an African solution based on dialogue, conciliation and peace-building.
"President Mills doesn't want to see the people of Ivory Coast (Cote d'Ivoire) streaming out of their country into Ghana as refugees," he added.
Source:Xinhua
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