Tawia Adamafio

Ghanaian minister From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tawia Adamafio (born Joseph Tawia Adams)[1] was a Ghanaian minister in the Nkrumah government during the first republic of Ghana.

Quick Facts Information and Broadcasting Minister, President ...
Tawia Adamafio
Information and Broadcasting Minister
In office
1960–1962
PresidentKwame Nkrumah
Minister for Presidential Affairs
PresidentKwame Nkrumah
Personal details
NationalityGhanaian
Political partyConvention People's Party
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Politics

Adamafio was a member of the Convention People's Party and rose to become its General Secretary.[2] In 1960, he was appointed the Information and Broadcasting Minister by Nkrumah.[3] He was also Minister for Presidential Affairs concurrently.[4] This was an influential position in the government at the time.[5]

1963 trial

Adamafio was one of the close associates of Kwame Nkrumah who stood trial for treason following the Kulungugu grenade attempt on his life.[6] Adamafio and others were freed after the first trial but was eventually found guilty following a second trial by a pro-government panel.[7] The trial judges were Kobina Arku Korsah, at the time the Chief Justice of Ghana and two Supreme Court judges, William Van Lare and Edward Akufo-Addo who later became Chief Justice of Ghana and then President of Ghana during the second republic. They were all sacked by Nkrumah following the acquittal of Adamafio.[7]

Publications

  • Adamafio, Tawia (1982). By Nkrumah's side: the labour and the wounds. Accra & London: Westcoast Publishing House. p. 144. ISBN 978-0-86036-176-3.
  • Adamafio, Tawia (1960-09-01). French nuclear tests in the Sahara. Accra, Ghana: Convention People's Party. p. 11. LCC U264.5.F8 A25 1960 .

References

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