Odeneho Nana Oppong, former Director of Transport at the Presidency under the erstwhile Akufo-Addo administration, has stated that the NPP’s neglect of Rev Isaac Owusu-Bempah contributed to the party’s humiliating defeat in the 2024 Election.
According to him, the founder and leader of the Glorious Word Power Ministry International wields strong spiritual energy that the NPP could have harnessed to turn things around.
“Rev Owusu-Bempah said my star is high up. So, he used me as a point of contact for Dr Mahamudu Bawumia to boost his chances of winning the 2024 Election during the electioneering season.
“I went to the mountains for the spiritual exercise with Rev Owusu-Bempah. Amid intense fasting and prayers, he switched my spirit with Bawumia’s spirit. For about 30 minutes, I couldn’t speak because my spirit was inside Bawumia. We even called him, but in the end, Rev Owusu-Bempah was dumped and nobody would pick his calls at the Jubilee House,” he said on Okay FM on March 26, 2025.
He lamented how the party, at some point in time, shut their doors to the popular man of God when he badly needed their help.
According to him, when former IGP Dr George Akuffo Dampare arrested Rev Owusu-Bempah, he called the Jubilee House on countless times, but nobody picked up his calls.
“When he was arrested, nobody picked his call from the Jubilee House. Even when he was hospitalised and was handcuffed on his sick bed, no NPP executive came to help him,” he said.
He accused the NPP under the erstwhile Akufo-Addo administration of being ungrateful and warned that if they continue to gag disgruntled members like Sarah Adwoa Safo from airing their grievances, the party will lose miserably in 2028.
“At this point, they should stop threatening disgruntled members like Adwoa Safo with disciplinary measures. It is about time they listened to grievances of members, patched up, and rebuild the party,” he said.
VPO/AE
Meanwhile, watch this captivating story of the Ghana’s 100-year-old World War II veteran whose name is widely known in the Buckingham Palace, below: