AN unassuming constituency in the Brong Ahafo Region, Tain, formally the
Wenchi West Constituency, with Nsawkaw as its headquarters, has, for
the second time within two years, become the focus of the more than 20
million Ghanaians and the world at large.
The Tain District earned
national and international recognition for the time on August 24, 2007
when the sod was cut for the multi-million dollar Bui Hydro Electric
Project. On that day, President J. A. Kufuor blasted a mountain of rocks
and rubbles to signify the beginning of work on the US$622 million
integrated project.
Tain (pronounced Tine or Tyne) shot into
national and international prominence for the second time last Tuesday
when it was mentioned by the Chairman of the Electoral Commission (EC)
as the constituency to determine the fate of two people, one of whom
would be the next President of Ghana.
For the second time running,
the EC could not declare a winner of the presidential election and by
the figures it released, the nation has to wait for Tain, which is yet
to make a choice between the two presidential candidates in the run-off.
The contending parties are the New Patriotic Party (NPP), with Nana
Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo as its presidential candidate, and the National
Democratic Congress (NDC), which has Professor J.E.A. Mills as its
candidate.
Prior to that determination, Tain was the scene of bitter
allegations between the NPP and the NDC following the general election
of December 7, 2008.
The NPP alleged that the constituency results had been manipulated to favour the NDC.
Days
after the polls, the EC office in the constituency headquarters,
Nsawkaw, was burnt down in what was suspected to be the work of
arsonists.
When the incident occurred, official documents, ballot boxes and the roof of the entire building were reportedly burnt to ashes.
Addressing
journalists on Tuesday, the Chairman of the EC, Dr Kwadwo Afari-Gyan,
said a winner would be determined only after voting had taken place in
the Tain Constituency on Friday, January 2, 2008.
For this reason,
Tain, with 56,000 registered voters, is now the battleground where the
close presidential race between Prof Mills and Nana Akufo-Addo will
finally be decided.
Dr Afari-Gyan, in making the announcement on
Tuesday, indicated that in last Sunday’s run-off between the two, Prof
Mills had 50.13 per cent of the votes, as against Nana Akufo-Addo’s
49.87 per cent.
The Tain District, which doubles as the Tain
Constituency, is one of the districts created in June 2004. It is
situated at the north-western part of Sunyani, the Brong Ahafo Regional
capital.
In terms of land area, Tain covers 4,125 sq kilometres.
Nsawkaw, the district capital, is 18 miles from Wenchi, the capital of
the Wenchi Municipality, out of which Tain was carved.
The district
shares common boundaries with the Wenchi Municipality to the east, the
Jaman North District to the west, the Sunyani Municipality to the south
and the Berekum Municipality to the south-west. It is also bounded by
the Bole District of the Northern Region to the north east and Cote
d’Ivoire to the north-west.
The big towns in the district, such as
Debibi, Brodi, Seikwa and Badu, are far from the district capital,
Nsawkaw, and its closeness to districts such as Berekum, Jaman North and
Sunyani deprive the district of the needed revenue, as the big towns in
the Tain District transact business with these nearby districts.
One
important community in the constituency is where the Bui Hydro project,
which is expected to add 400 megawatts of electrical power to the
country’s generation mix, is under construction.
The people are mainly farmers, cultivating food crops, especially maize and yam. They also cultivate cashew on a large scale.
Unlike
some constituencies where the people usually have a common language,
Tain is made up of different ethnic groups, with the people speaking
various languages. The people in the Banda side of the constituency who
live around Banda Ahenkro and Manje speak Nafana; those in Nsawkaw speak
Bono, while those in Seikwa, Badu and its environs speak Kolenge.
The name of the constituency is derived from the River Tain, which flows through a small town in the constituency, Tainso.
Some
prominent personalities who hail from the constituency are Alhaji Asuma
Banda of Antrak Air; Mr Johnson Asiedu-Nketia, the General Secretary of
the NDC, and Nana Kwadwo Seinti, a former Brong Ahafo Regional Minister
in the NPP government, who is currently Ghana’s Ambassador to Malaysia.
What
is at stake is the difference of 23,055 votes which could not give Prof
Mills the presidency, since the number of voters in the Tain
Constituency is more than the figure.
Prof Mills won in the Tain
Constituency during the 2008 general election. He obtained 16,211 votes,
representing 50.7 per cent, while Nana Akufo-Addo got 14,935,
representing 46.8 percent.
Ahmed Ibrahim of the NDC won the
parliamentary election with 14,965 votes, representing 48.1 per cent of
the valid votes cast, while the incumbent Member of Parliament (MP), Mr
Joe Danquah of the NPP, got 12,048, representing 38.7 percent.
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