Monday,
February 11, 2013
We have had good cause to
complain about inefficiency in the governance of this country over the years;
and we will continue to do so until our leaders change for the better. We will
not leave them to do things at their own pace, though. Very soon, we will take
our protest a step further to put sustained pressure on them at both the local
and national levels until they act responsibly to solve problems, not to create
new ones to add to existing ones.
No empty sloganeering about a “Better
Ghana” or a “Positive Change” will deter us from taking our leaders to task. We
are serving notice so they don’t continue to mistake our leniency for a
weakness to exploit.
When Ghanaians went to polls,
they endured physical pain and mental agony to exercise their franchise in the
hope that those to put in charge of affairs will be responsible enough to know
their plight and work hard to uplift living standards.
They didn’t endure all that
inconvenience to put dummies in charge of national affairs. Consequently, they
will not sit down unconcerned for those in office to continue rubbing salt into
their wounds.
I am completely angry at this
stage, apparently because of what I have just read from Myjoyonline about a
Chinese illegal gold miner shooting and wounding three Ghanaians with an AK 47
assault rifle in the Manso Abodom
community of the Amansie West District in the Ashanti Region. (Please,
see: http://edition.myjoyonline.com/pages/crime/201302/101206.php).
The
suspect, Xia Gui Xiang, who was arrested five days ago, has been remanded in
police custody pending further investigations. His victims, who were rushed to
the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital, are receiving emergency medical care.
The victims—identified as Kofi Bobie, Kwame Kyerematen and Kwaku Manu—were said to have been shot when they joined others from Manso Abodom who had entered the camp of the Chinese, who was mining illegally on Finger Mining Limited's concession.
The victims—identified as Kofi Bobie, Kwame Kyerematen and Kwaku Manu—were said to have been shot when they joined others from Manso Abodom who had entered the camp of the Chinese, who was mining illegally on Finger Mining Limited's concession.
The chilling impact of this
occurrence has virtually rankled with me and I want to begin this campaign to
call our national and local leaders to order. The circumstances surrounding the
incident are enough to prompt immediate action:
1.
The Chinese were alleged to have been mining
illegally in the concessional area of Finger Mining limited, a small-scale
mining company with legal rights for almost a year; a situation said to have
created tension in the Abodom community and its environs.
2.
Unhappy about the activities of these Chinese
illegal miners, the youth from Abodom had, on Tuesday February 5, 2013, massed
up at their chief's palace, complaining about the rate at which the Chinese had
been mining illegally in the area.
- The Abodom youth also alleged that the chief
of the community had collected money from the Chinese and allowed them to
operate illegally in their environment.
MY COMMENTS
I congratulate the youth of Manso
Abodom for rising up to tackle this Chinese menace, however limited their
actions might be. Or however unfortunate the outcome might be. They have served
notice that when the government and its security apparatus fail to defend the
interests of the people, they (the people themselves) will do so on their own,
damn the consequences.
There is a Chinese menace to
confront head-on. Nobody should deceive us that there isn’t.
Within a short span of a little
than 10 years, the Chinese have swarmed our country and are doing acts that
largely flout our laws; but the government is not acting efficiently to clamp down
on them. They are everywhere, vigorously exploring and exploiting the loopholes
that we have created in our system.
How many Ghanaians can go to
China to do things as they like, bulldozing their way through the national
landscape and grabbing every substance of value they can reach?
The nuisance that these Chinese
have become to us is beyond description; but our governments (especially those
of Kufuor, the late Mills, and the incumbent Mahama) have either looked on
unconcerned or looked away to encourage their activities.
Our state institutions
responsible for immigration and immigrant quota or work authorization (if there
is anything like that in Ghana) are either complicit in the influx of these Chinese
undesirables or arte themselves fronting for them to act illegally in the
country.
How do these Chinese enter the
country, in the first place? What is the legal backing given them to live in
the country? How do they ever know the parts of our country that have rich
minerals to settle in? How do they establish themselves in the various communities
to operate their illegal mining (or other economic) activities?
More importantly, how do they
manage to win the trust of the chiefs and members of the various communities to
be able to do their economic activities?
How do the chiefs feel by either
collaborating with them to exploit the resources of the land with so much
impunity and gusto while their own people remain unemployed and destitute,
forced to resort to anti-social activities (armed robbery, especially) to eke
out their livelihood?
There are many more disturbing
questions that will end up tearing me apart if I continue to brood over them.
I blame the government—this John
Mahama-led NDC government—at this stage. There is nothing to persuade me that
it has any plan to deal with this Chinese menace. Hindsight persuades me that
there is a cunning official complicity that must be condemned in no uncertain
words. And that’s exactly what I am doing.
Having gone with well-padded knee-caps
to panhandle in China, and having sold its conscience to the Chinese
authorities, what can the government do to solve this problem without being
browbeaten into submission by the Chinese authorities? And why is the
government afraid to act on this menace?
I recall what happened last year
when some 31 Chinese were said to have been arrested (with one dying in the
rumpus) for flouting the laws of the country on economic activities. The
Chinese government quickly warned Ghana of the consequences, and we haven’t
heard anything about that matter since then. You see how cowardly our leaders
are? What are they afraid of, anyway?
There are many more instances to
confirm the weaknesses in our government’s handling of cases related to foreigners
trooping into Ghana and destabilizing the economic, cultural, and social
sectors while our government looks on, paralyzed by its own incompetence in
tackling such problems.
The half-hearted attempt to flush
out foreigners from the retail business was more politically motivated than economically
expedient. No wonder it ended all too soon without any success. And nobody in
government is even thinking of that any more. I am really pissed off at this
stage; so should you be too.
I shall return…
·
E-mail:
mjbokor@yahoo.com
·
Join
me on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/mjkbokor to continue the conversation.
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