Godfred Yeboah Dame, the former Attorney General and Minister of Justice, has fired the John Mahama-led government following the remand of the Bono Regional Chairman of the NPP, Kwame Baffoe, commonly known as Abronye DC.
Dame highlighted that even Ato Forson, Collins Dauda and Richard Jakpa got self-recognition bail when he was the Attorney General.
According to Dame, Abronye should have been granted bail because the allegations against him are a misdemeanour.
He asserted that the level of intolerance of the Mahama administration is very reprehensible.
Speaking on the matter, Godfred Dame stated, “The most important thing is that tomorrow the matter is coming up, and I’m sure the court would be minded to grant him bail. Even in the most serious offences I prosecuted in my time, the treason trial, on the very first day, all the accused persons were granted bail.
“I prosecuted very high-profile figures in the NPP: Collins Dauda, Ato Forson, and Richard Jakpa, who has been given a high position in this administration. All of them were granted bail with very, very flexible terms,” he said.
He added, “Ato Forson was given self-recognisance bail, Collins Dauda the same thing, even Jakpa, with all the difficulties, a Justice of the Supreme Court called me and I said let him be allowed to go.”
Dame further called on the government to be tolerant saying, “The level of intolerance of this administration is very reprehensible; it ought not to be condoned in any democracy.”
Meanwhile, Alexander Afenyo-Markin, the minority leader, has quizzed the Ghana Police Service’s decision to keep NPP Bono Regional Chairman, Kwame Baffoe, also known as Abronye DC, in the custody of the NIB for a misdemeanour.
According to Afenyo-Markin, the NIB is not interrogating Abronye, nor are they investigating him.
He questioned why the Police would send Abronye, who is being investigated on a matter which is a misdemeanour, into NIB custody.
Speaking to the media at the Accra Circuit Court on September 12, Afenyo-Markin stated, “The police invited him on Monday, September 8. He responded to the invitation, went with his lawyers, and submitted himself to interrogations. Within an hour of interrogations, he was whisked into NIB custody”.
“Why would the police, investigating a matter and having their own cells, decide to send a citizen who is being investigated on a matter which is a misdemeanour into NIB custody?” he questioned.
He further explained, “Our checks at the NIB confirm that the NIB is not interrogating Abronye. Neither are they investigating him. According to the NIB, they are only the recipient of the man Abronye. In other words, the police sent him there so that they could keep him. That is why they received him. But they are not the ones who are investigating”.
“So the question is, why would the Ghana Police Service claim to be investigating a person and rather decide to send him to NIB cells? Is it to punish him or what?”
The minority leader added, “They kept him the whole of the night and on Tuesday morning, being the 9th, he was brought to court
“When they brought him to court, the police insisted that they still needed him for further investigation; therefore, they wanted him to be remanded into lawful custody. Of course, the judge upheld the application and remanded Abronye to be brought to court today.
Meanwhile, the Accra Circuit Court has remanded NPP’s Bono Regional Chairman, Kwame Baffoe, commonly known as Abronye, into police custody.
Abronye has been remanded into police custody for one week.
The Court explained that the remand is to allow prosecutors sufficient time to conduct further investigations into the case.
Additionally, Abronye, before his arrest, had sought political asylum and security protection over threats on his life by government operatives and IGP Christian Tetteh Yohuno and his boys.
Abronye, in a detailed letter, September 5, 2025, appealed to the embassies and high commissions of Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, the United States, Côte d’Ivoire, Spain, France and Italy for urgent protection.
According to Abronye, his troubles started immediately after the NDC assumed office in January 2025.
He revealed he was the first opposition politician invited, arrested and detained by the government following his criticism of the government’s dismissal of more than 150,000 workers.
