Police Chase NPP Shit-Bombers

THE POLICE at Asante Akim Agogo have started investigations to arrest those that smeared the Asante Akim North Constituency office of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) with human excreta at Sunday dawn.

Lawyer Andy Appiah Kubi, the NPP Parliamentary Candidate (PC) for Asante Akim North, has disclosed that the leadership of the party reported the weird incident to the police early Sunday morning.

According to him, the police had given the NPP leadership firm assurance that they (police) would thoroughly investigate the case and apprehend the perpetrators to face the law.

Lawyer Appiah Kubi stated that he and the NPP members at Agogo have strong confidence in the police to apprehend the culprits of the dastardly act, who are currently on the run, to be prosecuted.

The NPP members at Asante Akim Agogo woke up on Sunday morning to the horrible sight of the party’s ultra-modern constituency office, which was supposed to be commissioned later in the day, being soiled with human excreta.

Lawyer Appiah Kubi, who condemned the act in no certain terms, claimed that some NPP members that were at the party office on Sunday dawn around 2 am saw the people that carried out the act.

Speaking on Nhyira FM in Kumasi, the NPP PC refused to mention the names of the supposed culprits, only saying that the NPP would give its evidence to the police in due time to help arrest the culprits.

According to him, the party’s new office was strategically smeared with human excreta by some fiendish people to disintegrate and direct the NPP’s focus from winning votes for the party during the upcoming polls.

Lawyer Appiah Kubi, who sounded confident, stated categorically that the NPP is still focused and determined to win a staggering 85 percent of all valid votes in the constituency to help Nana Akufo-Addo to lead the party to power.

He flatly debunked speculations that the NPP is sharply divided at Asante Akim North, insisting that the party is more united than ever to amass votes in both the presidential and parliamentary polls.