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Apologise for deceiving cocoa farmers – Dr Kwaku Afriyie to government

Kwaku Afriyie (1) Dr Kwaku Afriyie is a former Member of Parliament for Sefwi Wiawso

Tue, 3 Feb 2026 Source: www.ghanaweb.com

Former Member of Parliament for Sefwi Wiawso, Dr Kwaku Afriyie, has called on the governing National Democratic Congress (NDC) to apologise to cocoa farmers.

He accused the NDC government of using cocoa pricing as a political tool during the 2024 general elections only to abandon farmers after winning power.

According to a report by adomonline.com on February 3, 2026, Dr Afriyie, who is also a cocoa farmer, said the high producer prices promised during the campaign were unsustainable and driven by political expediency rather than economic realities.

“They should come clean and apologise to the cocoa farmers for deceiving us,” he said, adding that individuals such as Eric Opoku and Samson Ahi, who championed the cocoa price agenda, were aware it was merely a political posturing.

“They knew it was political, and they have benefited from it,” he stated.

Dr Afriyie argued that the promise to increase cocoa producer prices played a significant role in securing electoral victory for the NDC but has now created difficulties for farmers.

“They won the election because of the cocoa price. That was the political dividend. But here we are”

“We must give the government the leverage and call for dialogue because, honestly, if they try to pay the price as promised, they will be at a loss,” he said.

Govt exploiting cocoa farmers - Dr Kwaku Afriyie

Cocoa pricing was a major campaign issue ahead of the 2024 elections, particularly in the Western, Ashanti, Eastern and Ahafo cocoa-growing regions.

The NDC pledged to increase producer prices to GH¢6,000 per 64-kilogramme bag, making farmer welfare a central campaign message.

Dr Afriyie warned that post-election economic realities now clash with the campaign rhetoric.

“They have already won power. The equilibrium will only come when cocoa is actually sold. In the real world, the farmers are suffering,” he stated.

Despite the current challenges, he noted that cocoa remains one of Ghana’s most equitable and reliable tree crops.

“Cocoa remains the most democratic crop. Caretakers get one-third every year while the allodial owner gets two-thirds. Even with all the problems, cocoa is still a lucrative tree crop,” he said.

He stressed the need for sustainable and transparent decision-making in cocoa pricing.

“We need dialogue, not politics. If government pays what it cannot sustain, everyone loses, including the farmers they claim to protect,” he stressed.

MRA/VPO

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Source: www.ghanaweb.com