Ras Mubarak: It's Unheard Of To Launch An Advert (Campaign Song) Without A Product (Mills)

Mohammed Mubarak Abdulai alias Ras Mubarak, an activist of the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) an unrepentant critic of the Mills� administration, has once again launched a blistering attack on the current government accusing them of compromising the security of the state in ways unimaginable. In his latest treatise cum anti-Mills tirade, the NDC youth activist stated that there is a calculated attempt to provoke the youth of the ruling party, especially supporters of the former First Lady Nana Konadu Agyeman-Rawlings, to wrath. Ras Mubarak contends that the plan to launch a campaign song for the 2012 presidential election at a time when the party is JUST three weeks away from electing a candidate for the polls is to say in the least, provocative, adding that President Mills is playing with the future of the NDC and testing the patience of the party's faithfuls and Ghanaians generally. �The questions observers are asking are - "what is the rush?" "Why couldn't they just wait until a leader is elected?�...It may be quite difficult for many of our members to remain patient in the face of such belligerence from our elected President and his supporters�," Ras Mubarak said. The NDC youth firebrand who believed �President Mills and the hawks around him� are bent on sending the country into �a state of righteous outrage and violence�, however, appealed to all Ghanaians, to remain resolute and patient. ��the outcome of peace and stability in our country is not ours alone to determine. The actions of the President and his people, will help to shape the ultimate decision. The use of force to defend the freedoms fought and won for Ghanaians could not be avoided. I shall therefore like to humbly appeal to President Mills, to abandon his aggression. We ask only for a level playing field and a fair congress. Anything else will increase, not decrease the use of righteous violence,� he said. Below is the latest open letter to President Mills by Ras Mubarak.