ACCRA, Ghana
Ghana's outgoing President Nana Akufo-Addo is facing a backlash on social media after he unveiled a statue of himself during a tour of the country’s Western Region.
The monument is intended to
honour the development initiatives the president has overseen whilst in office,
the region's minister Kwabena Okyere Darko-Mensah says.
But many Ghanaians have been
mocking its installation - outside a hospital in the city of Sekondi - seeing
it as "self glorification".
"The people of the
Western Region deserve better than these self-serving displays,"
opposition MP Emmanuel Armah Kofi-Buah posted
on X.
Akufo-Addo, who will be
standing down in January after two terms in power, has boasted that he has
fulfilled 80% of his promises to Ghanaians.
He unveiled the monument,
prominently placed in front of Sekondi's Effia-Nkwanta Regional Hospital, on
Wednesday during his visit that has been dubbed a "thank-you tour".
At the ceremony, Darko-Mensah,
who oversees the Western Region, highlighted several key projects initiated
under the president.
But the statue has sparked a
wave of criticism, with some Ghanaians questioning its importance when several
key projects remain incomplete.
"It would be admirable if
the president had allowed posterity to recognise and appreciate his work,"
an X user posted.
A section of the public is
calling for the statue - photos of which have gone viral - to be pulled down
after the president leaves office.
But not everyone is critical,
with some seeing it as an acknowledgement of Akufo-Addo's contributions to the
development of the country.
"He is very deserving of
this exquisite monument. The greatest president I've ever had. You will be
missed by Ghanaians," one person posted, adding that Akufo-Addo was the
"founder of Ghana's free education system".
During his tour, the
80-year-old president has singled out his policy to scrap fees for secondary
schools as his "most significant legacy".
His visit has also fed into
campaigning nationwide by the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP). Western Region,
in the south-west, is one of 16 regions in the country.
The president urged people
there to vote for his deputy, Vice-President Mahamudu Bawumia, in next month's
general election.
He will be the NPP's candidate
and Akufo-Addo said a vote for him would see the continuation of the party's
policies and projects.
Bawumia's main challenger will
be former President John Dramani Mahama, who is seeking a comeback under the
opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC).
The high cost of living is a
key campaign issue in Ghana, Africa's leading producer of gold.
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