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Nkrumah blamed for Ghana's current woes

Sun, 9 May 2004 Source: Chronicle

The founder and leader of Fear God Fellowship International, a church based in Accra, Prophet Prince Baidoo has attributed the suffering of the people of Ghana since independence to the involvement of Ghana?s first President, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah and his successors in idol worship. The prophet said this to reporters at a news conference in Tema last Friday, organized by the Ghana branch of the International Network of Churches, Ministries and Businesses (INCMB) to announce a business conference that would take off in Accra this week.

The conference would assemble businessmen and women and pastors from the United States, the United Kingdom and some African countries to discuss ways improving the economy and the strategic investment opportunities in the country.


According to Prophet Baidoo, also a member of ICNMB, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah put the country in bondage when he used a pregnant woman?s blood to make a god that he called Kankan Nyame. ?After Independence, whoever has sat on the throne of the presidency has never had it easy ruling the country .At the end, Ghanaians lie in difficulties.?


Describing the Kankan Nyame, the prophet said, ?Dr. Nkrumah made a pregnant woman kneel, tied seven white handkerchiefs around her neck, and hands. There were some bowls around the pregnant woman containing human blood and human skulls placed in-between the bowls.?


He said these photographs were sold in 1966 when Nkrumah was overthrown.


According to him, Nkrumah kept this god at the Flagstaff house and at the castle.

?Some of the human blood was also sent to the Independence Square. The statue at the Independence Square was built with human blood? he reiterated.


On the immediate former president, Prophet Baidoo said Dr. Nkrumah?s Kankan Nyame and former President Rawlings? slogan Gye Nyame had no significant difference.


He described the star in a hand with the inscription Gye Nyame on the country?s bank notes as juju and could be attributed to the fallen value of the cedi.


The Man of God further said bloodshed would continue as it happened at the stadium disaster if Ghanaians continued to accept blood as stated in the national song, Yen ara asase ni.


?Some of the juju medicine was also kept in the Peduase Lodge and at the Osu cemetery. When invited, I will be able to show and prove where it was buried at Osu cemetery,? he added.

He said everyone aspiring to be President could have good plans and policies for the nation but when that person is elected or becomes President and enters the castle, all the good policies or plans would be fizzle into nothing.


To solve these problems, the Prophet pleaded President J.A. Kufuor?s administration to pave way for prophets from different religious bodies to deliver the nation through fasting and prayers.


?There will be conflict, confusion and bloodshed if the jujus that Nkrumah brought are not destroyed to free the nation from bondage during the electoral process this year.?


He told The Chronicle that he had over 70 spiritual revelations for the nation, but would reveal them after he had been invited.


Dr Nkrumah, he said, did all these because he wanted power to rule Ghana and Africa that is, being the Messiah of Africa.

Talking about the investment conference, the public relations officer of the INCB, Mr. Fletcher, said the network was bringing in businesspersons with the fear of God to invest in the country. ?It is time for churches to also give to their congregation. It should not always be one - sided.? He said the conference would not be a mere talk shop but one that would see the implementation of the outcome of the discussion.


He disclosed that the network was prepared to invest in the aviation and the telecommunication industries as well as other viable ventures in the country.


Mr. Fletcher said the INCMB had the mission of facilitating meaningful relationship, equipping and enabling ministers by sharpening their ministerial skills, evaluation of current trends among others.

Source: Chronicle