Saturday,
August11, 2012
As is to be expected, those who
have no concrete solution for solving the country’s problems are still fouling
our air with their useless political rhetoric. They are still making utterances
to annoy us.
Sekou Nkrumah is one of such
idle-talkers whose presence on the political scene clearly confirms the
shortcomings of contemporary Ghanaian politics. Let me say it for the umpteenth
time that Sekou Nkrumah is an idle-talker who hasn’t made any concrete
contribution toward solving Ghana’s problems and has no moral justification to
continue making his presence felt. He is a nuisance.
Yet, he has had the impudence to
make scathing comments to continue denigrating ex-President Mills. We don’t
doubt his hatred for the ex-President; but we doubt his ability to help us
solve our country’s problems.
Even before the dust settles on
the departed President, Sekou is reported to have picked up the pieces again,
this time, bad-mouthing ex-President Mills as being a “good man” and not a “great
leader.”
Speaking on Joy FM’s news analysis programme, Newsfile, on Saturday, he said, “we
have heard...people say Professor Mills was a great leader and honestly we
don’t speak ill of the dead, that is our culture, we respect that and I think
we gave Prof the due respect but again it doesn't mean that we should go out of
our way to say things that are not true.”
“Professor Mills,” according to him, “can never be described as a great leader but [he] was I think a good person who severed his country well. He got caught in politics; he made the choice to accept to become a politician and had to play the game of politics, rose to the highest of the land.” (Myjoyonline, 8/11/12)
“Professor Mills,” according to him, “can never be described as a great leader but [he] was I think a good person who severed his country well. He got caught in politics; he made the choice to accept to become a politician and had to play the game of politics, rose to the highest of the land.” (Myjoyonline, 8/11/12)
This
is the most annoying utterance to have come from such a moron in Ghanaian
politics! An empty
rhetoric based on a useless game of semantics.
Had
Sekou broken issues down to itemize the characteristics of “a great leader” as
against what a “good man” could be, I would have spared him this vitriol. But
he didn’t, which leaves him open to what I have taken him on to do. He is a
moron!!
And
to imagine him talking about “our culture not allowing us to speak ill of the
dead”! As a hybrid, which is the “culture” that he is referring to? The
Ghanaian one, which he is not qualified to be associated with? Or the Egyptian
one that he is equally unfit to be lumped up with, having not fully been
integrated into that system as well?
He
is a bat—neither a bird nor a mammal—which he demonstrates in his political
life as well, flitting from one political camp to the other and virtually
rendering himself an anathema.
Unlike
ex-President Mills who stood the test of Ghanaian elections and passed, Sekou
hasn’t contested any election to determine whether he is electable into public
office or not. How dare him judge others, then?
Without
any doubt, he has already spoken ill of the dead President. So, what is the
point in what he attributes to “our culture” in this sense?
Whatever qualities the
ex-President had to make him qualify as “a good man” in Sekou’s estimation were
the very personal characteristics that influenced his politicking. These were
the very traits that shaped his worldviews and motivated his politicking to
such an extent as to stand out as a “Man of Peace.” These were the very characteristics
that endeared the former President to the hearts of the millions who grieved at
his death. And this is the legacy that we expect our politicians (every
Ghanaian in public life) to emulate!!
Can one be a “great leader”
without being a “good man”? Or what is a good man like that deprives him of
being seen as a “great leader”? What is Sekou’s understanding of the adjective “GREAT,”
though?
Indeed, nowhere in his political
life did the former President crave for the title of a “great leader” to be
recognized and accorded due respect as such. He didn’t project himself as such.
Neither did he ever see self-aggrandizement as an attraction; nor did he uphold
himself as a paragon of truth and justice. He endeavoured and succeeded in
acting as a fallible human being who needed God’s guidance in his efforts to
register his mark on Ghanaian politics. He chose to use his God-given talents
and capabilities to serve his country to the best of his abilities. And he died
as such.
He never sought to think that
nation-building was a “one-man show” to make him want to hog space or do it all
by himself. Great leaders act that way. Yet, Sekou doesn’t see such a move as
praiseworthy.
Nothing can be more irritating
than such comments made by narrow-minded characters of Sekou’s ilk who can’t
even rub shoulders with the ex-President in any department of life. In truth,
the former President’s career spanned several departments of life, culminating
in his being elevated to the highest office of the land as the President of
Ghana. He had risen from the lower level to that apogee in his political career—not
because he wanted to be perceived as a “great leader.”
In fact, unlike others,
ex-President Mills never bothered Ghanaians with his personal accomplishments
as a trump-card to win their votes or goodwill. He concentrated his efforts on
what needed to done to develop the country and improve living standards. He
might have made promises to that effect but he didn’t base those promises on
so-called personal interests or self-conceit as others are known to be doing
all over the place.
I want to make it clear at this
point that viewpoints of the sort expressed by Sekou reinforce the fact that most
of those who haven’t seen anything worthy of praise about President Mills’
politicking are part of Ghana’s problem. The ex-President has played his part
and is being remembered as such. How does Sekou think he will be remembered if
he dies today? A piece of clod?
To all intents and purposes, the
former President’s manner of politicking made a huge difference for those of us
with eyes to see as a major positive break from the single-handed “strongman
mentality” that has been the bane of Ghanaian politics all these years.
Obviously, the ex-President’s
laid-back approach to managing the affairs of his government and this country
put him streets ahead of his predecessors, including Sekou’s own father, whose
dictatorial and brash manner of politics created more enemies for them than
needed and worsened the country’s plight.
What Sekou and those
short-sighted detractors have failed to appreciate is that every historical
period produces its own calibre of leaders whose governance style suits the
exigencies of the particular situation in which they find themselves. In
ex-President Mills’ case, he emerged to serve purposes other than what Sekou
and those thinking like him might imagine.
Those of us who recognize the
genius that ex-President Mills was will continue to cherish him and uphold his
calling as an “Asomdwehene.” If for nothing at all, that’s his accolade, which
he lived as a lifestyle and died with. As he rests peacefully in his grave at the
“Asomdwe Park” in Accra, we will continue to remember him for all that he stood
for and died accomplishing.
He is gone and must be cherished
for his contributions to national development. He didn’t serve Ghana because he
wanted to be recognized as “a great leader.” He did so because he was good
enough to warrant the people’s trust and confidence to be given the mantle to
play his part in national development.
The millions of people who
grieved at his death don’t really care whether the morons functioning as his
relentless critics want to draw any line between his being a “great leader” or “a
good man.” Instead of flogging the dead “Asomdwehene,” people like Sekou should
find better ways to redeem themselves and serve Ghana better than the
ex-President has done.
Whether a “great leader” or a “good
man,” ex-President Mills played his part and has already had his name indelibly
written in the annals of this country’s contemporary history. May he rest in
perfect peace and his name continue to ring loud in our ears!!
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