Alhaji Imoru Egala (5 December 1916 – 1 April 1981[1]) was a Ghanaianpolitician and educationist. He held various positions in government in the Gold Coast and after independence of Ghana. He was the foreign minister of Ghana in the First Republic between 1960 and 1961.[2]
Along with serving as minister in different roles at different period in Kwame Nkrumah's administration, he also served a member of parliament for the Tumu Constituency.[3][4][5]
After the coup etat by Colonel E. Kotoka and Major Afrifa in 1966, Egala who was a well known associate of Kwame Nkrumah and a key member of his Nkrumah regime, was jailed by the military.[6]
People's National Party
Egala was also a founder of the People's National Party a political party which claimed to represent and continue the Nkrumah Heritage. The People's National Party which won the 1979 presidential and parliamentary elections. He sponsored the candidacy of Dr. Hilla Limann,[7] who became the president of the Third Republic of Ghana,[8] because he was then serving a 12-year ban from public office in Ghana.[9][10]
In January 1980, Egala began a court process against the electoral commissioner seeking redress of the court to restore his eligibility for public office.[11]
Personal life
Alhaji Imoru Egala had four wives; Hajia Amina Egala, Hajia Memuna Egala, Hajia Adisa Egala and Susie Egala along with 12 children; three boys (Idris Egala, Dramani Egala and Osman Egala) and nine daughters (Zainabu Egala, Fati Egala, Rahinatu Egala, Ramatu Egala, Abiba Egala, Meri Egala, Zalia Egala, Fatima Egala and Rabi Egala).
^Tsikata, Yvonne M. (May 1999). "Aid and Reform in Ghana"(PDF). Aid and Reform in Africa:Country case study papers. World Bank. p. 12. Retrieved 11 April 2007. The initial choice, Mr. Imoru Egala, who founded the PNP, was under a twelve-year ban from public office dating back to 1969. He was appealing this ban at the time of the election and was hence ineligible to run for president.