Atta Mills Goes Berserk!

Dr Cadman Atta Mills, the President�s honest, truthful and very educated brother, yesterday descended heavily on Mr Ken Kuranchie, the Managing Editor of the Daily Searchlight, describing him as a dishonest, lying and uneducated character! The highly respected Cadman Atta Mills had called the telephone number of Mr Kuranchie to remonstrate with the latter over yesterday�s lead story in the Daily Searchlight which revealed how the President�s brother had said that his government intended to tell Vodafone to go to hell� out of Ghana if all attempts to renegotiate with the British company failed. The Searchlight reported that Dr Atta Mills made these comments in an interview with a reporter of Asempa FM in Kumasi. According to the President�s brother, who is a member of the Economic Advisory Group that advises the President and in this capacity draws all ministerial privileges including public accommodation, told newsmen that he had never employed the phrases attributed to him in our publication yesterday because he never said those words. He rebuffed attempts by our editor to tell him to go back and listen to the exact words he used in his interview with Asempa FM. Dr Cadman Atta Mills insisted that he granted the interview and so knows the exact words that he used. �Go back and listen to the interview and you would known that you have wrongly attributed words to me that I did not say,� the President�s brother said. Then getting angry, the respected and hitherto quiet Atta Mills said angrily that Mr Kuranchie was a dishonest, lying and uneducated journalist! Below, unedited, we reproduce the exact words of Dr Cadman Atta Mills with Asempa Fm, to establish whether we are lying or not; On the future of the Vodafone contract; �You know there is a lot of water under the bridge. You may not like the process as it took place but to abrogate it may generate a lot of legal wrangling. I mean legal haggling and things like that which may take a very long time to resolve right. �I mean I have no advice but maybe the first option is to try and see whether or not you CAN NEGOTIATE YOUR WAY OUT. I mean, if it doesn�t work, we will consider other options, plan B, you know plan B and plan C which may very well include okay telling them TO TAKE A HIKE�I DON�T WANT TO SAY GO TO HELL AND THEN WE HANDLE ANY LEGAL ISSUES THAT COME AS A RESULT OF IT.� On the complaints by the Minority; Well, I mean if I were the Minority, I will be worried. I mean because the decision, right�to at the very least not the Vodafone agreement alone, but either to re-negotiate or to abrogate it, is an implicit criticisms of how they handled it. I mean you don�t expect them therefore to start cheering and saying hurray Atta Mills, you know, for re-negotiating, you know. By the very act we are saying that the Minority which was in government when the Vodafone was sold under a certain amount of haste without due process and everything else has done something very, very wrong. They can claim, right, that this is the best deal that Ghana could get at the same time, but they cannot totally absolve themselves off responsibilities and therefore I mean I am not at all surprised that this will be their reaction. I am sure if it had been this government in this same position we would have screamed even higher with the higher decibel about the unnecessary screaming and attempting to renegotiate something that was very well done to begin with. That�s in their interest to say they did the right thing and therefore why are you bringing it up.