Saturday,
March 14, 2015
The situation in Ghana over
the years, especially since the emergence of this 4th Republic, has confirmed
that this democracy is designed to serve the large interests and
self-acquisitive purposes of the wily, slimy politicians and not those whose
sweat, labour, and toil generates the wealth to sustain that kind of run-away,
reckless politics.
And for the sake of political
expediency, anything bothering on ethnicity can be used by such unconscionable
politicians to divide ranks. Don't ask me why. Beyond it all are the real
problems that are often glossed over just because those paying the piper are
doing overtime. Too bad!!
In our time, we have real
problems to contend with but cannot succeed under this atmosphere. The fixation
on "Dumsor" seems to have paralyzed everything and everybody; but we
can go beyond that crisis to dig deep down.
Ghana is still tottering
because Ghanaians are the architects of that deplorable state of affairs. No
outsider can know Ghana better than Ghanaians should do; and no outsider has
the ultimate solution to lift Ghana and its citizens out of the death-trap that
they have pushed themselves into because of their unproductive attitude toward
tackling existential issues. Neither will God care about such problems of
existence, which is why all the noise being made by the so-called
"Men-of-God" ends up compounding such problems.
Many happenings over the past
few days have confirmed my poor opinion of Ghana's bogus democracy that
reinforces mediocrity and empty political rhetoric to pave the way for those
with adroit skills to fleece the economy. And they are adept at pulling strings
to advantage.
The Woyome case has just been
laid to rest, giving credence to the adage that those who know how to wash their
hands will dine with kings/queens (the cream of society). I clearly stated my
abject disgust for the Woyome fraud and will not water it down here now that
all my apprehensions have been confirmed.
But that confirmation has set
in motion many other episodes to prove that the kind of democracy that is being
practised in Ghana is a shortcut to national disaster.
Folks, if you have been
closely monitoring how the NPP people take on the government and how the
government easily wriggles itself out of the tight corner into which the empty
political rhetoric pushes it on and off, you shouldn't be surprised that
nothing is working well in Ghana. For all it does, the NPP doesn't come across
as credible either; it only latches on to mishaps and mis-steps to proclaim its
redeemer status to a Ghanaian populace that knows it better than it knows
itself.
In any case, though, Ghanaians
know that it is the Mahama-led administration that has their mandate to solve
existential problems. But there is too much bumbling and fumbling by the
government, which intensifies their woes.
And the situation will worsen
for as long as the system encourages mediocrity. Unfortunately, the wheel is
grinding to a painful juncture. Those who put in everything to sustain Ghana
must be chafing now that they have no access to the corridors of power and
cannot pick up the pieces that they left behind for their successors. They
cannot go back to undo the harm that their own mis-steps inflicted. All that
they complain about fits into the agenda of a painful after-thought that no
Ghanaian who knows what happened under their watch will buy into. Pathetic!!
I don't blame Rawlings and
Kufuor for baring their teeth at Mahama, even if they are complicit in the
perpetration of the rot that is fast denigrating their legacy. Blame or praise
them all you wish to do, these two surviving Ghanaian leaders can best tell us
why they knew what the country's problems were but couldn't solve them to
prevent what we are subjected to today.
To John Mahama and his administration,
the woods and the forest are the same. So is it for Akufo-Addo and his
loquacious NPP camp that is more invested in finding fault (even where there is
none) than offering anything substantial to solve problems). Ghana can never be
moved out of the doldrums with this kind of lame-duck posture.
Given this already damning and
disheartening circumstance, one would hardly imagine that the very foundation
of local governance in Ghana that has over the years seemed to empower the
citizens will begin all too soon being undermined. But that is what has been
set in motion to further complicate governance problems.
Matters began with the
Electoral Commission's decision to hold district-level elections so the various
structures supporting the three-tier system of governance could be nourished to
sustain a workable Parliamentary democracy. Unfortunately, the apex
(Parliament) itself is so ridiculously useless as not to warrant any analysis;
but because it depends on the lower-level structures, it must be considered
within the context of the danger that looms.
That danger has been stoked by
the Supreme Court, which ruled against the EC, meaning that the district-level
elections cannot be held to bring in new elements for local governance. More
than 137 million Cedis has already been spent by the EC to prepare for the
elections.
With this "voiding and
nullification" of the elections, the country stands to face more political
crisis. How can it survive (especially with some of the anti-Mahama elements
wishing and manouevring for a military coup---as if they don't know the harm
that the military political toads have already done to Ghana)?
Responding to the crisis, Mr.
Edwin Nii Vandepuye, a Deputy Minister of Local Government and Rural
Development, has issued a directive to all Regional Ministers "to remind
all Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs) and all Unit
Committees in their regions that their tenure ends today March 14, 2015".
(See
(http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomeP…/NewsArchive/artikel.php… to form your own opinions)
(http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomeP…/NewsArchive/artikel.php… to form your own opinions)
Scary!! A dangerous vacuum
being created? What is the Supreme Court wishing for Ghana?
Let us cut everything short.
The truth, is that the problems emerging at this local government level will
add to others already proving to be too intractable for the government and its
critics. These problems will calcify and create fertile conditions for anti-government
and anti-Ghana orchestrations.
At the end of the day, nothing
will work well to move the country forward, whether it is the NDC, the NPP or
any of the mushroom political parties that is put in office. Is that what Ghana
deserves in this 21st century?
And why is it so easy for
those adroit at knocking heads together to succeed in their wily ways to the
disadvantage of the vast majority of Ghanaians? More food for thought!!
I shall return…
·
E-mail:
mjbokor@yahoo.com
·
Join
me on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/mjkbokor to continue
the conversation.
No comments:
Post a Comment