
According to her, when voting eventually started, the delegates started exposing their ballots to one another, which caused questions. The atmosphere only got tense when the regional youth organizer raised his ballot after casting a vote, she added.
“The atmosphere in the room was tense, and having attended elections before, I started to worry… The voting booth was set up such that anyone watching from outside the hall could see which option a voter had selected. There was too much internal stress. I stepped outside when I first arrived to look around, and when I came back in, I was told to use a different exit. When I attempted to open the door, I discovered that it was not working.
“The officers who were standing there informed me that it had been shut from below, which sharpened my perception and made me believe that there were terrible individuals inside.
As soon as I opened the door, I began sounding the alarm outside because my life might have been in danger if I had done so inside. While sounding the alarm, the TV3 cameraman tried to interview me. I insisted that there were 28 electoral votes, but one gentleman argued that there were actually 30.
“They began to rush me and make threats while asking me who I am and whether I knew where I am. So they shoved me, and I stumbled. As I started to run, I gave our personal security a warning to hurry and bring the motorcycle. I got on the motorcycle and rode right up to my hotel room,” she remarked.
She claimed that the national campaign manager later got in touch with her and set up a phone call for her with Dr. George Akuffo Dampare, the Inspector-General of Police.