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Ghana MPs brawl in parliament over mobile money tax

Ghana parliament

A brawl has broken out in Ghana's parliament during a late-night session over a contentious government-proposed levy on electronic transactions.

MPs shoved, pushed and threw punches at each other, while others tried to stop the fighting.

The chaos started after opposition MPs rushed forward to prevent Deputy Speaker Joseph Osei Owusu from leaving his seat to vote, local media reports.

He was chairing the session, which was then adjourned because of the disorder.

The opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) has rejected the proposed levy of 1.75% on electronic transactions, which includes mobile-money payments.

It says it will hit low-income people and those outside the formal banking sector.

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But Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Artta has said it is necessary to widen the tax net, arguing that it could raise an extra 6.9bn Ghanaian cedi ($1.15bn; £870m) next year.

The parliamentary session began on Monday morning and broke up after midnight, the local Graphic newspaper reports.

It tweeted video footage of the chaos:

Blows in parliament over E-Levy voting https://t.co/2MfiE3WxTj pic.twitter.com/teU56PmyeM

— GraphicOnline (@Graphicgh) December 21, 2021

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

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Many Ghanaians have expressed disappointment at the behaviour of their MPs, saying they ought to be role models – not behaving immaturely.

The deputy speaker's vote was seen as crucial as parliament has been heavily divided over the proposed tax. He is from the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP).

The NDC said that as he was chairing the session he could not vote.

The proposed levy was approved by parliament's finance committee by 13 votes to 12, but only after its chairman cast the decisive vote in favour of the proposal, the Graphic says.

Parliament convened again on Tuesday, but MPs did not vote on the proposed levy after agreeing to adjourn the session to January.

Ghanaian politics has been fractious since last year's election, when the NDC and the NPP obtained 137 parliamentary seats each.

One seat is held by an independent, who has thrown his weight behind the NPP, giving it the edge.

In January, soldiers entered parliament to end a brawl among MPs over the election of a speaker – the NDC's Alban Bagbin was elected to the post, after some NPP members voted for him rather than their party's candidate, Mike Oquaye.

Mr Bagbin was not present during the chaotic session on Monday, leaving Mr Owusu from the NPP in the speaker's chair.

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Brawls in other parliaments:

  • Turkish MPs traded blows earlier this month after an opposition MP was allegedly insulted
  • Armenian MPs fought three times in two days in August – one broke out after Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian was called a "lying populist"

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  • India's upper chamber was described as "war-like" during an altercation in August over contentious legislation
  • Pakistani MPs sustained minor injuries in June after lawmakers traded blows and threw books at each other
  • A Bolivian MP complained that her hair was grabbed by another MP during a brawl in June that also saw other lawmakers involved in a fist-fight
  • Lawmakers in the Pan-African Parliament punched, kicked and made death threats during a session in South Africa in June
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