Ade Coker In Temale To Attend Chief Mobila’s Funeral Rites 

Alhaji Mobila has since been buried according to Islamic custom and tradition. But the final funeral rites have been organised to give him the last respect according to the Islamic custom and tradition.

Ade Coker In Temale To Attend Chief Mobila’s Funeral Rites 
The Greater Accra Regional Chairman of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Mr Joseph Kobina Ade-Coker has stormed Temale on Thursday October 6, 2022 to attend the final funeral rites of the late Northern Regional Chairman of the NDC, Chief Alhaji Abdulai Ibrahim Mobila

The NDC stalwart has represented the former President John Dramani Mahama and the entire members of the umbrella family-NDC to give the last respect to Chief Mobila who has passed on at the Tamale Teaching Hospital at the age of 84 for the past two months ago.
He was a Chief at Tugu Yapala, a farming community near Tamale and was elected as NDC Northern Regional Chairman in 2018.
Alhaji Mobila has since been buried according to Islamic custom and tradition. But the final funeral rites have been organised to give him the last respect according to the Islamic custom and tradition.

Speaking in an interview with this reporter via telephone call from Temale, Mr Coker on behalf of former President Dramani Mahama expressed their deepest condolence to the family and Islamic communities in Temale on the passing of Chief Alhaji Ibrahim Mobila, saying that may his soul rest in perfect peace.
He indicated that the party had lost a great pillar in the region as a whole.

He said he was a father to everyone in the NDC, no matter the political affiliation, saying “we will really miss a man we call to give advice on anything that the youth can think of and he was down to earth just to make sure every party member got the support they desired and we will forever remember him for his good works in the party and the region as a whole.”

Mr Coker described the late Northern Regional Chairman of the NDC as a unifier, humble, courageous, fearless and a listening chief to the people he served and whose death should be used as example to others especially people in high positions of trust to tolerate the views of other people.