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Last week four of the noisiest radicals - Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, Sekou Toure of Guinea, Algeria's Ben Bella and Mali's Modibo Keita-met in the dusty West African capital of Bamako for an emergency conference to see what could be done. Answer: not much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Africa: Revolutionaries Adrift | 3/26/1965 | See Source »

Following an unsuccessful grenade attempt on Nkrumah's life in 1962, five men were charged with treason, among them three of the Redeemer's closest associates-Information Minister Tawia Adamafio, Foreign Minister Ako Adjei, and Hugh Horatio Cofie-Crabbe, executive secretary of Nkrumah's Convention People's Party. Tried before Ghana's highest judge, the quintet got a split verdict; two defendants-an Opposition M.P. and a former civil servant-were convicted, but Adamafio, Adjei and Cofie-Crabbe were acquitted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ghana: Double & Deadly Jeopardy | 2/19/1965 | See Source »

This would never do. Summarily, Nkrumah fired the chief justice who had presided, declared the verdict void and ordered the five retried. With a new, and presumably wiser, judge on the bench, the retrial was held at Christiansborg Castle, the massive, 300-year-old redoubt that the Redeemer some times uses as executive headquarters. This time none of the five had a lawyer-perhaps understandable in view of the fact that the chief counsel for Adamafio and Adjei during the first trial had himself since been jailed. At one point Adamafio announced with resignation that he had thought over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ghana: Double & Deadly Jeopardy | 2/19/1965 | See Source »

...right he was. The twelve-man "jury," drawn chiefly from members of Nkrumah's Ideological Institute, needed only 50 minutes last week to find all five defendants guilty and deserving of death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ghana: Double & Deadly Jeopardy | 2/19/1965 | See Source »

...Nkrumah's opponents are subjected to courtroom complexities. The regime announced that Dr. Joseph Danquah, 69, the distinguished scholar and early nationalist leader who ran against Nkrumah in the 1960 presidential election, had died in a detention camp. A heart attack, an official spokesman blandly explained, but in nearby Nigeria the newspapers were full of allegations of death by torture. Snapped Nigeria's President Nnamdi Azikiwe, an old friend of Danquah: "If independence means the substitution of indigenous tyranny for alien rule, then those who struggled for independence have not only desecrated the cause of freedom but have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ghana: Double & Deadly Jeopardy | 2/19/1965 | See Source »

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