Mills Panics And Rushes To Ho

AFTER POSTPONING his tour of the Volta Region till after the Sunyani Congress, President John Evans Atta Mills, according to deep throat sources in the NDC, will meet delegates in Ho today. According to the sources, the decision of the President to postpone his tour and rather meet delegates in the region was due to certain unfavourable conditions. The meeting, which was originally sandwiched in the tour, has become necessary to give the President the opportunity to campaign and canvass for as many votes as possible to beat the former First Lady, Nana Konadu Agyemang-Rawlings, who is also contesting the flagbearership position of the party. A source told DAILY GUIDE that the meeting was also to assess the situation on the ground from the delegates� point of view, and give the President a fair picture of what is happening, as this would inform his official tour next month. Meanwhile, views taken by DAILY GUIDE across the region suggest that the people are not satisfied with President Mill�s administration. Most of the people noted that things were quite difficult under the president�s government. Some also claimed that the current administration was only interested in making promises and cutting sods, instead of fulfilling promises and actually developing projects which sods had been cut. Taxi drivers who spoke to this paper also lamented about high fuel prices, taxes, high cost of spare parts and high cost of living, which they said was making life unbearable. Other inhabitants of the region complained of bad roads, high utility bills and low salaries. A retired public servant and die-hard NDC supporter who claimed anonymity said the President�s tour, which will be characterized by the commissioning and inspection of projects, will face some challenges in the region because there seems to be little or no work being done in the region so far as projects were concerned. He said the likely projects to be commissioned would be the emergency classroom blocks that had been constructed, but even so most of them had already been commissioned by the Volta Regional Minister, Joseph Amenowode. When contacted, the Volta regional chairman of the party confirmed the President�s visit to the region but said he would be meeting only regional executives, contrary to what some of the delegates who had been invited said earlier. He also refuted the assertion that conditions were not favourable for the President�s tour and added that there were more than enough projects to be commissioned and sods to be cut.