Member of Parliament for Ofoase Ayirebi and Minister of Information, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, has clarified President Nana Akufo-Addo’s famous ‘sika mpɛ dede’ comment.
The President during his nation address on Sunday, October 30, 2022 made a now trending comment ‘sika mpɛ dede'(money doesn’t like noise).
As part of measures his government is taking to address the cedi devaluation and restore the economy the president gave the assurance to the public of the government’s commitment to resolving the economic hardships.
Speaking proverbially, the president borrowed a French saying which has since gone viral on social media as well as broadcast and print media.
The President said, “Fellow Ghanaians, as the French would say, l’argent n’aime pas le bruit, to wit, money does not like noise, sika mpɛ dede. Where there is chaos, where there is noise, where there is unrest, you will not find money. If you talk down your money, it will go down. If you allow some unidentifiable person to talk down your money, it will go down.”
Explaining the President’s speech, the Information Minister, on Peace FM’s ‘Kokrokoo’ discussion programme on Monday morning, he stated that the President’s ‘sika mpɛ dede’ quote was in reference to speculations on the impact of the cedi depreciation.
He said, the proverbial quote by the President, he added, is to invoke calm.
“I think the President said that in reference to the speculation issue. If we don’t let the real purposes for currency trade work and we create panic in the system with people making social media audio that you should remove your money from the bank or else this will happen results in panic and then you will go to the banks and people are trying to do withdrawals to buy dollar because they have seen something on social media or sometimes, you will see news websites [otherwise well-respected news website] has done a story like it happened on Friday that if you have dollar, the government will seize it and give you cedi and that creates panic; so the point the President was making was all those things don’t help,” he said.
When asked why, of all the President said, this is what has most caught the attention of Ghanaians, the Minister responded; “For every address, there are takeaways.”
He noted that some people are spreading false information that people who have their investments with the banks risk losing them, thus resulting in fear and panic.
Source: theGhanaianvoice.com