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A Dansoman District Court has granted bail to a leading member of the Movement for Change, Hopeson Yaovi Adorye.

Mr. Adorye has admitted that he detonated some dynamites in the Volta Region during the 2016 elections, an action he undertook to favour the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP).

He was granted a bail of GH¢20,000 with two sureties, one of which must be justified. The former Member of the NPP, was thus, charged by the police for publication of false news.

According to Nana Ohene Ntow, a leading member of the Movement for Change, Mr Adorye has been taken to the Ministries Police Station to complete the necessary procedures for his release from custody.

“He was put before the Dansoman District Court this [Thursday] morning and was charged with publication of false news. He has been granted bail and has been taken to the Ministries Police Station with our lawyers to secure his release,” Mr Ntow said on Accra-based JoyFM Thursday, May 23, 2024.

The case has been adjourned to June 26, 2024.

Meanwhile, Yaw Buaben Asamoa, a former Member of Parliament for Adentan who has parted ways with the NPP and is now a member of the Movement for Change, has claimed that the arrest is politically motivated.

Following a visit by presidential aspirant and leader of the movement, Alan Kyerematen, Mr Buaben Asamoa said the allegations against Hopeson Adorye are false and unjust.

“Hopeson Adorye is not about to run away from Ghana or his home because the police intend to charge him with the publication of false information. So to go to the extent of keeping him all day in the police station and bringing him over to the Ministries to detain him, you point fingers backwards at yourself that there is something political at play and it is not fair,” he said.

Hopeson Adorye was picked up after he spoke on Accra FM on May 10, where he confessed to being part of a plot that detonated dynamite in the Volta Region to scare voters in the stronghold of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) to favour the NPP.

“Prior to the elections, we blasted dynamite in parts of the Volta Region, and that scared a number of people. When I finished casting my ballot in Tema, I drove to the Volta Region, and when I asked for the number of people who had voted and the expected number of voters, it turned out people did not come out to vote,” he claimed.

I have long flushed my NPP membership card -Hopeson Adorye