Danquah Institute founder, Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko, has celebrated the immediate past Minister for the defunct Ministry of Inner-City and Zongo Development, Dr Mustapha Hamid for his unblemished integrity describing him as “one of the most principled and honest human beings I have ever known in my life”.
According to the journalist cum lawyer, Dr Hamid is so honest and upright in his dealings that when he is given money to perform a task, he ends up spending less for the same job.
He revealed that he is the kind of person who when assigned campaign money, will spend within budget and return the remaining funds.
“Hamid is the kind of person when he takes campaign money, based on a budget, and he ends up spending less than that to do the same job, he brings back the change!”, he said of the former Minister in a Facebook post.
Mr. Otchere-Darko shared these kind words publicly to celebrate the onetime Youth Organizer of the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP) and a founding member of the policy think tank, Danquah Institute, who celebrated his birthday on Monday.
Dr. Hamid who for many years served as the spokesperson for President Akufo-Addo, during his days as an opposition leader, on Monday, June 14 clocked 50 years.
The former lecturer at the University of Cape Coast was celebrated by many both within and outside the governing NPP, with many touching on his fine and endearing personality.
Gabby, who said he has known Dr. Hamid for many years recounted how they first became friends during his early years as the editor of a reputable business newspaper, the High Street Journal.
He also touched on the former Information Minister’s days as the news editor at Choice FM and his alter invitation to him to be the editor of his paper, The Statesman.
Read the unedited piece by Gabby Octchere Darko…
“Yesterday (Monday) was the birthday of one of my best friends, Mustapha Hamid. To put it mildly, he is one of the most principled and honest human beings I have ever known in my life. A sacred trait I pray will guide and guard him for the rest of his life.
Hamid is the kind of person when he takes campaign money, based on a budget, and he ends up spending less than that to do the same job, he brings back the change!
Abotsi, sorry I was not around to join you yesterday.
Welcome to the Club of where real life begins.
Forget the hype at 40. This is it! From this time on, you start becoming even more philosophical about things you took for granted. It is not that after 50 ones performance slows down. It only matures! One becomes more efficient in how to use time and energy— resources that become more and more precious as the years go by.
I’ve known Hamid for over two decades now. He is admirably religious, disciplined but liberal. It is this personality quirk that allows him to get on well with people. But, he resents cheats and those he considers disloyal.
He is protectively Ghanaian. Jealously Danquah-Dombo-Busiast. Simply put, Hamid is a proud, humble and decent man.
He is one of the very few Ghanaians I know who genuinely enjoy reading as a devout hobby! An intellectual of the highest order; loyal to his friends, his beliefs and philosophy and emotionally and intellectually defensive of the things he cherishes and holds in high devotion.
Hamid was an editor of a reputable business newspaper, the High Street Journal, when we first became friends. He also became news editor at Choice FM. A couple of years later, I invited him to be the editor of The Statesman. He moved on to become the National Youth Organiser of the NPP, an acknowledgement of his years of service to the party, beginning as a foundation member of the Danquah-Busia Club’s branch at UCC in 1991.
As strong an Akufo-Addo loyalist as they come, Hamid later contested and lost the general secretary position of the NPP in 2005, moving on in 2007 to become spokesperson to presidential candidate Nana Akufo-Addo and remained so throughout the opposition years.
He, at the same time, went on to teach at Cape Coast University; became Executive Director of the Danquah Institute; achieved a PhD while teaching at Cape Coast; became a cabinet minister in 2017 and now looking forward to a new challenging chapter after attaining the ripe age of 50. His has been half a century of service with integrity and achievements, with much more to come.
I consider myself lucky to be worthy of your friendship, Abotsi. Stay honest, stay true, stay loyal to family, party and country”.