The Defence Ministry, the
Military High Command and other security agencies on Wednesday 29, May 2019 witnessed the
unveiling of a monument in honour of the late Major Maxwell Mahama.
The ceremony is to mark two
years since the soldier was gruesomely murdered at Denkyira Obuasi in the
Central Region.
Major Mahama, who was the
commander of the Military detachment stationed at Diaso in the Upper Denkyira
District of the Central Region, met his untimely death on the 29th of May 2017
after he was lynched by the residents who claimed they thought he was an armed
robber.
The construction of a
20-foot monument in honour of the solder at the Airport Hills Roundabout has
been met with stiff opposition from a group of residents of La who say they see
no reason why the monument should be on their land when the deceased officer
was killed in the Central Region.
The 20-foot monument in
honour of the soldier at the airport hills roundabout
At an earlier press
conference, the conveners asked;
”Why La? Why not the place
he died or his own hometown but they dump it on us because La is a dustbin…We
are telling him we don’t like this and that we expect him to act. He has told
the whole country that he is a listening president, so he has to listen to us.
Perhaps in a week’s time, we should expect to hear something. We expect to see
something.”
The President of the
Coalition of La Associations (COLA), Oscar Nii Odoi Glover in a Citi News
interview said the coalition is still opposed to the move by the government.
”He said the indigenes of
La are disappointed over the decision to mount the statue on their land.
The entire La State is
against putting up the statue on our land. It is not just COLA. We are only a
group in La. Anything can happen in the future. They have 24-hour military
guard, we know it but we’ve not made our mind to do anything against it”.
Besides the statue, a trust
fund has been set up by the government to cater to Major Mahama’s wife and
children.
Late Major Maxwell Adam
Mahama and family.
President Nana Akufo-Addo
also made a personal donation of GH¢ 50,000 towards the fund.
The monument is in line
with a request from the family of the late military officer.
Major Mahama’s family made
the request known during a courtesy call on the president in 2017, where it
expressed the hope that the monument would serve as a reminder of the tragedy
and a deterrent to the canker of mob justice in Ghana.
Official Police account
indicates that he jogging along the Diaso-Dominase-Ayanfuri, stretch when a mob
attacked him upon suspicion that he was an armed robber.
No comments:
Post a Comment