The NPP MPs want some necessary consultation to be done before it cooperates with the Majority.
The
incoming administration has been resisting other government decisions
claiming they ought to be consulted by the exiting government.
In a predictable response, Human Rights and pro-democracy groups are incensed.
"I am surprised. extremely surprised. I don't know what the agenda of the NPP is," Mina Mensah is dismayed.
She
recalled that the Minority has for years accused the Majority of
foot-dragging and the government of lacking the political will to pass
the bill into law.
She said if eventually, an
exiting government wants to do what everyone agrees to be the needful,
the Minority must not become a sudden stumbling block.
"I don't understand," she expressed her disbelief.
Samson
Lardy Ayenini described the Minority's resistance as baffling. He said
while consultation is not bad in itself, the Minority are using this
excuse to "absurd, shameless" and "pathetic" levels.
Explaining
the enormous effort invested in the bill, Samson Lardy recalled that he
led the Multimedia Group Limited to petition the Speaker of Parliament
over the delay in passing the law.
He recalled
that both sides of the House raised issues they wanted to amend.
Informed by these concerns, the pro-RTI groups made several changes and
submitted a 21-page report touching on five critical issues raised by
the House.
"All of those were taken care of...all of those were clearly accepted by the committee," Samson said.
He
said the Speaker of Parliament, Mr. Edward Doe Adjaho vowed to "deal
with the [bill] everyday" of Parliamentary sitting until the bill is
finally passed.
"They did it for about four days or so and then they abandoned it," Samson expressed disappointment.
He said this new delay is a waste of the tax payer's money, because after six batches of parliament, the bill is still pending.
The
Minority NPP will become the Majority when a new government is sworn in
on January 7, 2017 following the NPP's victory at the December 7 polls.
He suspects the Minority are against the bill because it wants to get the credit as the party that passed the bill into law.
"It
baffles me that the Minority is reducing this to who will get the
credit...we have wasted the state resources. I mean it is baffling," he
noted.
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