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Nkrumah won us independence, respect that – Nyaho Tamakloe

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[dropcap]D[/dropcap]r Nyaho Nyaho-Tamakloe has said even though Dr Kwame Nkrumah did not “single-handedly” win independence for Ghana, he was the torchbearer and must be respected as such.

“What are documented cannot easily be altered,” Dr Nyaho-Tamakloe told Class91.3FM’s Executive Breakfast Show host Moro Awudu on Monday, 18 September in an interview following the release of a statement from the presidency which announced that August 4th will henceforth replace September 21st – Nkrumah’s birthday – as Founders Day while the latter date will be marked as Nkrumah’s Memorial Day.

In Dr Nyaho-Tamakloe’s view, however, “the British handed over the new nation Ghana … to one person in this country and that is what we know.”

He said “some of us were lucky to be alive even though I was a kid,” adding that the colonialists left independent Ghana to “no person other than Dr Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah, so why the change now?”

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“This is what we know, this is what we saw. Now any other person who played any role including my own great granduncle B V Tamakloe, that should be left in the history books for us to study or read,” he noted.

According to Dr Nyaho-Tamakloe, even though others fought and died in the struggle for independence, “the one who projected himself to such a height and was able to win us independence – I won’t say single-handedly, no, others helped him but he was the one who was given the torch when the English were leaving – was Kwame Nkrumah and I think that must be respected.”

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