Tuesday,
February 18, 2014
Folks,
we woke up this morning to be told that operatives of National Security
Secretariat demolished the toll booth constructed at the Okponglo entry point
of the University of Ghana from where the University of Ghana's designated
collectors charged motorists fees for plying that route.
The
National Security Coordinator Larry Gbevlo Lartey has justified the demolishing
of a toll booth; and I wholeheartedly support him and the action taken by the
security operatives.
Let
me state Col. Gbevlo Lartey's justification before adding my own voice to the
matter.
He
had said that the structure had to be pulled down to ease congestion at the
University’s entrance since it had been wrongly cited.
“They
have started some construction at that point which I can see the intent to turn
into a toll booth when completed and that has been removed because it cannot be
there,” Col. Gbevlo Lartey said.
He
added that, “there are two parts of this, the first thing is that it shouldn’t
be there in the first place because they are causing complete nuisance to
everybody and the second is that their intent to construct a toll booth there
must be stopped now before they complete it”.
BACKGROUND
The
University of Ghana started charging road tolls at the beginning of February to
recoup a loan it took to fix its roads. The Students' Representative Council protested,
and two students of the University have taken the
matter to court and it is yet to be decided on.
Interestingly,
the universities authorities sought to blackmail government by demanding about
2.63 million Dollars to not go ahead to collect tolls. The government didn't
heed that request.
Unfortunately,
the Minister of Transportation talked loosely (that he wished every community
would repair roads in its environs and collect tolls, which might have
motivated the University of Ghana authorities to go ahead with their plan to
collect tolls).
Then,
Parliament stepped in to worsen matters as its sub-committee on transportation
approved the University of Ghana's intentions to collect the tolls.
Right
then, the stage was set for what would cause the demolition of the toll booth
and the insistence by Col. Gbevlo-Lartey that his Secretariat would quickly
move to demolish anything of the sort re-constructed because the University of
Ghana is part of Ghana and anything it does that conflicts with the norms must
be tackled before it festers!!
I
commend Col. Gbevlo-Lartey for being so resolute as to level the toll booth and
prove that no one can do anything without authorization in Ghana.
REACTION
An
NPP-oriented lawyer, Egbert Faibille, condemned the demolition of the toll
booth, describing it as "unlawful" and threatening to go to court
against Col. Gbevlo-Lartey.
His
claim that the demolition pre-empted the pending court case against the
University authorities by two students whose lawyer he is, seems to be his main
argument.
He
claimed that the national security has no right to enter into the property of a
semi-autonomous institution, albeit a public one, and pull down structures
without a court order.
To
him, the action is arbitrary and an anathema to the rule of law.
He
wondered: “What aspect of national security operations say that when there is
traffic on an ordinary course of road it has national security implications and
National Security can just go in and pull structures down”?
To
this "kokompe lawyer", I respond that he is ignorant of national
security matters and should have known his station as such and kept to it.
The
inconvenience caused motorists could trigger anti-government protests and
constitute a major security crisis, if this "kokompe lawyer" cares to
know. What constitutes national security is known to those charged with
ensuring national security, not some so-called "kokompe lawyers" who
have gained some kind of prominence because of their involvement in partisan
politics.
MY
COMMENTS
I
am delighted at what has been done to prove that no institution in Ghana is an
island and that no one has any right to take any unilateral action with
wide-ranging negative impact on national life.
The
University of Ghana authorities may claim to have repaired that portion of the
Accra-Madina road with funds from their own coffers; but they haven't told us
how the funds were generated. Were the funds not part of the subvention given
to such institutions by the government, meaning that it's public funds over
which the university cannot claim authority?
Of
course, the university authorities deserve commendation for taking steps to
repair the road to make it motorable—and the government deserves maximum
contempt for neglecting its duty in that context; but nothing warrants the
imposition of tolls by the university authorities.
Tolls
on roads are imposed by the requisite institution in charge of roads and
highways (the Ghana Highway Authority and its mother-Ministry, with the
approval of the government or Parliament, if need be).
No
institution can just get up to do anything as has been done by the university
authorities because anything of this sort has serious repercussions on people's
lives and governance, generally.
What will happen if the people in
areas endowed with natural resources also get up one day to impose tolls and
levies on companies exploiting those resources or to erect barriers and begin
giving conditions?
Law and order must be respected.
In this case, National Security made the proper move.
Those
who are condemning it over this action have a lot of thinking and learning to
do. I am glad that sanity has been brought into this matter and will urge Col.
Gbevlo-Lartey to sit up to take on anybody wishing to capitalize on this
situation to cause needless trouble for national security.
The
time has long since passed for stern action to be taken to check recklessness
in public life.
Col. Gbevlo-Lartey and his team
are security experts and know better than people like you which seed will
germinate to cause national security problems. He is in control and has done
the right thing.
People like you are too
uninformed to poke your noses into those areas. Just stay off and let the
security experts tackle the problem.
Beyond that point, you need to
know that there are specific procedures for constructing toll booths and
collecting tolls. The University of Ghana isn't mandated to do what it did.
You and Egbert Faibille are
treading where you will be scarred. Don't go there. Allow Col. Gbevlo-Lartey
and his team to keep Ghana peaceful and tranquil.
Those attributing the demolition
exercise to a jungle situation are lost. This action is timely and most
warranted. It doesn't signify a return to "military days" but it
reassures Ghanaians that law and order can be ensured by the requisite
institutions charged with sustaining national security.
ll
things said, though, the government must be ashamed for not paying attention to
the problem when it first cropped up. Knowing very well the importance of that
road, it shouldn't have looked on unconcerned for it to deteriorate to the
point as to force the University of Ghana to step in, using resources from its
coffers.
How
do our Ghanaian leaders think?
I shall return…
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E-mail:
mjbokor@yahoo.com
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