Nkrumah became increasingly paranoid that there were threats to his life from political opposition and passed the Preventive Detention Act in 1958. This act allowed for the incarceration of an individual for five years with no charge or trial, with only Nkrumah having the power to exonerate the accused. Believing that his life was in danger, Busia fled the country in 1959 and continued his academic career in Europe, taking a professorship at the University of Leiden before become a fellow at St. Antony's College, Oxford University. While on the run, Busia was expelled from Parliament on 26 June, 1959.
June 23: Gov. Guggisberg announces plan to increase African recruitment in Government service -- 1921
Prior to 1921 the priority of the British Empire was to develop Ghana for the priority of European capitalists and the crown without focus on native development. A fervent nationalist movement began forming in Ghana in the late 20th century and soon after the appointment of Governor Gordon Guggisberg in 1919, the Crown faced heavy pressure for drastic reforms to benefit the native Ghanaian population.
June 18: Tullow, Anandarko and Kosmos announce that commercial quantities of off shore oil at Cape Three Points in the Western Region
June 15: Gold Coast Elections for Expanded Legislative Assembly Held in 1954
June 13: Theodosia Okoh born in 1922
June 4: Armed Forces Revolutionary Council Formed (1979)
June 1: First Centralized States Formed in the Savanna (Mamprugu, Dagbon, and Nanumba)
Jan Kooi
Jan Kooi achieved some fame in the Netherlands for his courageous feats in the Atjeh (now Aceh) war, the longest, deadliest and most inconclusive war in Dutch colonial history. The sultanate of Atjeh, on the northern tip of Sumatra, was known to be a stronghold both of piracy and of orthodox Islam. During the 19th century, the Dutch gradually expanded their control over Sumatra.
2nd Lieutenant Pieter Hermans
African Soldiers Mutinies
Revolts and resistance by Africans occurred not only on the African continent but also among Africans in the diaspora. The best-known examples are the slave rebellions in the western hemisphere, where historians have also explored and described patterns of accommodation and acquiescence among slave populations.