General News of Sunday, 12 November 2023
Source: www.ghanaweb.live
2023-11-12The Flagstaff House Kitchen Brawl: A story of Nkrumah’s fight with his bodyguard who was trying to kill him
Salifu Dagarti, Dr Kwame Nkrumah and Seth Ametewee (from L to R)
Ghana’s first president, the late Dr Kwame Nkrumah, is arguably the country’s leader who survived the most assassination attempts in its history.
Nkrumah himself in his book, ‘Dark Days in Ghana’, according to a series of posts shared by Ghana Crimes on X on an article by Philip Afeti Korto, stated that at least 6 assassination attempts were
Read full article.made against him.
“Members of the Police and the Special Branch have been involved in each of the six attacks made on my life, and have frequently ignored, and sometimes aided, the activities of people they knew were plotting to overthrow the government,” part of Nkrumah’s book is quoted.
The article narrated that one of Nkrumah's attacks was by his own security guard, Police Constable Seth Ametewee, at the then seat of government, the Flagstaff House, on Thursday, January 2, 1964.
“The time was about 1:15 pm and the setting was the courtyard of the seat of the Government of Ghana, the Flagstaff House. In the company of two security guards and his aide de camp (ADC), Salifu Dagarti, President Nkrumah was about moving from the Flagstaff House to the Christiansborg (Osu) Castle for lunch.
“Police Constable Ametewee, who was on guard duty at the Flagstaff House shot at President Nkrumah four (4) times when the President was moving towards his car. Four gunshots at the President by no other person but a Police Officer assigned to guard the presidential office? This gory act resonates with the Shakespearean assertion that goes,” part of the article reads.
With the chaos, Nkrumah’s driver was nowhere to be found and the two guides, including his Aide-De-Camp (ADC), who were with him took cover behind his vehicle.
He fired again at Nkrumah once again, when the late former president stood up to understand what was happening, but Superintendent Salifu, the ADC, intervened and took the bullet for the president in his head which killed him instantly.
"Constable Ametewee, who was appointed a presidential guard so few days ago, fired again but his gun failed and the president started crying for help but the armed police officers and senior government officials at the scene made no move. One official was reported to have remarked, 'They’ve bungled it again'.”
Ghana’s first president then started running for cover which led to him finding the Flagstaff House kitchen where the famous fight took place.
“Ametewee had bitten the President’s cheek and the President also kicked Ametewee in the groin and Ametewee became unconscious momentarily,” parts of the article reads.
It added that “It was only at this stage that other police officers intervened, knocking out Ametewee and he laid on the floor of the kitchen of the Flagstaff House. He was then placed under arrest.”
Constable Ametewee was sentenced to death by the Criminal Session of the High Court in Accra, for the murder of Supt Salifu and the attempt to kill the president.
However, the Supreme Court overturned the death sentence of Ametewee after it ruled that his intention was not to kill Salifu; saying “If a person does an act with the intent to kill…and his act happens to take effect, whether completely or incompletely, against a different person, he shall be liable to be tried and punished as if his intent has been directed against that different person…”
One of the big six, JB Danquah, died in prison after he was detained for allegedly bribing Ametewee to kill Dr Kwame Nkrumah.
View the series of tweets below:
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