Colonel Victor Coker-Appiah | |
---|---|
Brong-Ahafo Regional Commissioner | |
In office 1974 –30 April 1975 | |
President | Colonel Acheampong |
Preceded by | Commander J. A. Kyeremeh |
Succeeded by | Lt. Col. O. K. Abrefa |
Commissioner for Works and Housing | |
In office 1972–1974 | |
President | Colonel Acheampong |
Preceded by | Major Roger Felli |
Succeeded by | Colonel R. E. A. Kotei |
Commissioner for Local Government | |
In office 1972–1972 | |
President | Colonel Acheampong |
Preceded by | Major General N. A. Aferi |
Personal details | |
Education | Royal Military Academy Sandhurst |
Alma mater | Achimota School |
Profession | Soldier |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Ghana Armed Forces |
Branch/service | Ghana Army |
Rank | Colonel |
Unit | Field Engineers Regiment |
Victor Coker-Appiah is a Ghanaian soldier and politician. He served in various capacities in the National Redemption Council (NRC) military government led by Colonel I. K. Acheampong which overthrew the civilian elected government led by Kofi Abrefa Busia.
Coker-Appiah attended Achimota School for his secondary education. After joining the Ghana Army,he became one of the first Ghanaians to be commissioned into the Engineers Regiment. He was also one of the first Ghanaians to train at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst for between 1957 and 1958. He was promoted to the rank of Major in August 1965. [1]
Coker-Appiah is reported to be one of the officers who was involved in the overthrow of President Kwame Nkrumah's Convention People's Party (CPP) government. He was responsible for arresting the Director of Military Intelligence among others. He was the commander of the Field Engineers Regiment based at Wajir Barracks at Teshie in Accra at the time. [1]
During the era of the National Liberation Council (NLC) military government,Coker-Appiah was the administrative head for the Western Region in 1969. He was instrumental in averting a strike by staff of the Prestea State Farms Corporation in the region during this period. [2]
Following the abortive attempt in April 1967 to overthrow the NLC government,Coker-Appiah led investigations that resulted in the public execution of the leaders. [1]
Colonel Acheampong initially appointed him as Commissioner for Local Government. [3] He was moved shortly afterwards to be the head for the Ministry of Works and Housing. In 1974,he was transferred to the Brong-Ahafo region where he became the Regional Commissioner. [4] [5]
In April 1975,he was removed from the NRC government and later appointed the military attachéto the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) in Addis Ababa,Ethiopia.
The Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) is the unified armed force of Ghana,consisting of the Army (GA),Navy (GN),and Ghana Air Force.
Joseph Arthur Ankrah Born was a Ghanaian army general who was the head of state of Ghana from 1966 to 1969 in the position of Chairman of the National Liberation Council. Before becoming head of state,Ankrah served as the first commander of the Ghana Army. He was Ghana's first military head of state. Ankrah also served as Chairperson of the Organisation of African Unity from 24 February 1966 to 5 November 1966.
Ignatius Kutu Acheampong ( ə-CHAM-PONG;was the military head of state of Ghana from 13 January 1972 to 5 July 1978,when he was deposed in a palace coup. He was executed by firing squad on 16 June 1979.
Lieutenant General Akwasi Amankwaa Afrifa Born was a Ghanaian soldier,farmer,traditional ruler and politician. He was the head of state of Ghana and leader of the military government in 1969 and then chairman of the Presidential Commission between 1969 and 1970. He continued as a farmer and political activist. He was elected a member of Parliament in 1979,but he was executed before he could take his seat. He was executed together with two other former heads of state,General Kutu Acheampong and General Fred Akuffo,and five other generals,in June 1979. He was also popularly referred to by his title Okatakyie Akwasi Amankwaa Afrifa and was in addition the abakomahene of Krobo in the Asante-Mampong Traditional Area of the Ashanti Region of Ghana.
Operation Guitar Boy was the code-name for an attempted coup d'état on 17 April 1967 in Ghana,by a group of junior officers of the Ghana Armed Forces. Although unsuccessful,the coup resulted in the assassination of Lieutenant General Emmanuel Kwasi Kotoka,Ghana's Chief of the Defence Staff.
Lieutenant-General Emmanuel Kwasi Kotoka Born was a Ghanaian military officer who was a member of the ruling National Liberation Council which came to power in Ghana in a military coup d'état on 24 February 1966. This overthrew the government of Dr. Kwame Nkrumah,the first president of the republic.
The National Liberation Council (NLC) led the Ghanaian government from 24 February 1966 to 1 October 1969. The body emerged from a coup d'état against the Nkrumah government carried out jointly by the Ghana Police Service and Ghana Armed Forces with collaboration from the Ghana Civil Service.
The National Redemption Council (NRC) was the ruling Ghana military government from 13 January 1972 to 9 October 1975. Its chairman was Colonel I. K. Acheampong,who was thus also the head of state of Ghana.
The Supreme Military Council (SMC) was the ruling government of Ghana from 9 October 1975 to 4 June 1979. Its chairman was Colonel I.K. Acheampong. He was also the Head of state of Ghana due to his chairmanship.
Erasmus Ransford Tawiah Madjitey,was a Ghanaian police officer,diplomat and politician. He was appointed Police Commissioner in the Gold Coast on 9 October 1958,making him not only the first Ghanaian to head the Ghana Police Service,but also the first African South of the Sahara and the British Commonwealth to command a Police Force.
For the rapper with the same birth name,see V.I.C.
Leaders of the established 1966 military coup,including army officers Colonel E.K. Kotoka,Major A. A. Afrifa,Lieutenant General (retired) J. A. Ankrah,and Police Inspector General J.W.K. Harlley,justified their takeover by charging that the CPP administration was abusive and corrupt. They were equally disturbed by Kwame Nkrumah's aggressive involvement in African politics and by his belief that Ghanaian troops could be sent anywhere in Africa to fight so-called liberation wars,even though they never did so. Above all,they pointed to the absence of democratic practices in the nation—a situation they claimed had affected the morale of the armed forces. According to General Kotoka,the military coup of 1966 was a nationalist one because it liberated the nation from Nkrumah's dictatorship—a declaration that was supported by Alex Quaison Sackey,Nkrumah's former minister of foreign affairs.
Benjamin Kofi Amoah Forjoe was a Ghanaian police officer,diplomat and politician.
Kojo Tsikata was a Ghanaian military officer and politician,who served as the Head of National Security and Foreign Affairs of the Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC). He was listed as a retired army captain in the Ghana Army.
Gilbert Boafo Boahene was a Ghanaian civil servant who served as secretary to the Supreme Military Council,and also served on two occasions as secretary to the Public Service Commission. He was the cabinet secretary to the Supreme Military Council government in Ghana at the time of its overthrow in the 1979 June 4th revolution.
Lieutenant Colonel Kwame Barney Agbo is a Ghanaian soldier and politician. He was a member of the National Redemption Council (NRC) which overthrew the government of Kofi Abrefa Busia on 13 January 1972.
Lieutenant Colonel Chemogo Dodzil Benni is a Ghanaian soldier,politician and diplomat. He was a member of the National Redemption Council (NRC) military government which ruled Ghana between January 1972 and October 1975.
Lt Col Kofi Dovia Habada was a Ghanaian army officer and politician. He was the Volta Regional Commissioner from 1972 to May 1973,and the Greater Accra Regional Commissioner from 1973 to October 1975.
William Adjei Thompson was a Ghanaian soldier and politician. He was the Greater Accra Regional Commissioner from 1975 to 1977,the Regional Commissioner for the Brong Ahafo Region from 1977 to 1978,and the Central Regional Commissioner from 1978 to June 1979. In 1985,he was reappointed Greater Accra Regional Minister and in 1986,appointed Regional Secretary for the Western Region. He remained in this position until April 1988 when he was made Greater Accra Regional Minister for a third time. He served in this capacity until 1991.
Hans Kofi Boni is a Ghanaian politician during the first republic of Ghana. He was the Member of parliament (MP) for Ho West.