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Armed Men in Military Uniform Raid Ghana Opposition Party HQ


FILE - New Patriotic Party candidate Nana Akufo-Addo is seen in 2012. Armed men attacked NPP offices Monday.
FILE - New Patriotic Party candidate Nana Akufo-Addo is seen in 2012. Armed men attacked NPP offices Monday.

Armed men in military uniforms raided the headquarters of Ghana's main opposition party Monday in an attack that raises political tension one year ahead of a presidential election that is likely to be closely fought.

The New Patriotic Party (NPP) said about 15 men backed by military and police vehicles vandalized its offices in a downtown neighborhood at around 1 a.m., confiscated computer equipment and claimed to have found weapons.

It was not clear who conducted the break-in and police spokesman Cephas Arthur told Reuters an initial investigation suggested it was a "civilian raid" rather than one carried out by the security forces.

Whatever its origin, Arthur said it was the first such act for years in Ghana, a democratic country that prides itself on peaceful politics and regular changes of power.

The election will pit President John Mahama against Nana Akufo-Addo, whom he narrowly defeated in 2012. Mahama's National Democratic Congress party renominated him as its candidate Monday.

Mahama's chances of winning a second and final term have been hurt by chronic power cuts that have angered voters and a sharp slowdown in an economy that was one of the continent's fastest growing, based on its exports of gold, oil and cocoa.

FILE - A vendor hawks flags of the ruling National Democratic Congress and New Patriotic Party in a traffic jam in Kasoa, Central Region on December 1, 2012 ahead of the December 7 presidential elections in Ghana.
FILE - A vendor hawks flags of the ruling National Democratic Congress and New Patriotic Party in a traffic jam in Kasoa, Central Region on December 1, 2012 ahead of the December 7 presidential elections in Ghana.

For its part, the main opposition party faces an internal rift and its chairman, Paul Afoko, has been suspended.

Supporters of the rival NPP factions clashed in the country's second city of Kumasi this month and one person died.

Party officials say the simmering row, unless resolved, will hurt NPP election chances. NPP communications director Nana Akomea released a detailed statement on the raid and said the party did not know who conducted it.

"The three remaining party officials were made to surrender their phones and herded into the security post and locked up. A couple of minutes later, the military uniform men ordered them out," the statement said.

"They [the armed men] produced a sack and proceeded to pour the contents out on the floor. The contents included four AK-47s and four machetes, which the military uniformed men claimed to have found on the compound," it said.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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