Friday,
April 24, 2015
Folks, the common saying that
"coming events cast their shadows ahead of them" is at play in the
affairs of the NPP's Akufo-Addo vis-a-vis the electoral victory chalked by
Nigeria's Gen. (rtd.) Mohammadu Buhari.
True to my prediction in an
opinion piece just after Buhari had won the Presidential elections, Akufo-Addo
is doing exactly what a desperate power-seeker of his kind is expected to do.
He is scratching around for anything to hang on to just to keep his political
ambitions alive!!
He quickly commended Buhari and
followed up with public utterances, expressing optimism that what Buhari has
done can be replicated in Ghana.
Not satisfied with such
utterances, he has now taken the GIANT step to physically sit down with Buhari
to learn the ropes. He was in Nigeria on Thursday for that purpose, creating
the impression that as a serial loser of elections, he can follow the suit set
by Buhari to change the dynamics of Ghana's politics in his favour.
As the news reports on his
interactions with Buhari revealed, Akufo-Addo "met with the incoming
president of West Africa’s most populous nation in Abuja to cement ties with
the then opposition party". (See
http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/artikel.php?ID=355824).
Quick questions: What will
cementing ties with Buhari's APC mean for Akufo-Addo and his NPP? Cementing
ties? What is that at all? That Akufo-Addo and his NPP see themselves as
underdogs to be uplifted to stardom on the account of the Buhari experience? I ask
again: What is that element of cementing ties? Why now and not before the
general elections in Nigeria?
Did Akufo-Addo and his gang of
tribal rogue politicians ever know of the existence of the APC in Nigerian
politics before the recent elections? Why didn't they draw nigh to the APC
then?
Folks, we recall that the party
headed by the defeated Jonathan Goodluck was in the good books of the Kufuor
administration at the time it was headed by the former President, Olusegun
Obasanjo (Kufuor's personal friend, who contributed 50,000 Dollars to the NPP's
2000 electoral campaign efforts).
Even after Obasanjo had left
office---and until his head-butting sessions with Goodluck, which forced him
out of the PDP---he remained a close ally of Kufuor and his political camp. At
that time, the APC and its Gen. Buhari were considered anathema to Nigerian
politics. The NPP people never wanted to have anything to do with such a
political camp.
Out of the objective realities of
the Nigerian political situation, the APC has now emerged to clinch electoral
victory. And then, the NPP has seen it as a beacon to gravitate toward for
sustenance. Why are these NPP people so predictable in their politics of
opportunism? Why can't they inject some sophistication into their politicking,
at least, to outwit their critics/opponents?
We ask these questions for a good
reason to explain why politics in our part of the world is dirty. There is no
morality behind it all. It is a kind of politics of expediency that doesn't
solve problems. A kind of "barracuda politics" that destroys a lot
just to sustain one life. And in the case of the NPP, it is only Akufo-Addo's
life that is aimed at being sustained through all these predictably childish
and roguish manouevres!!
While gravitating toward Gen.
Buhari's APC, they forget their own trail. In the light of happenings in Togo
(general elections will be held in the next few days and the border between
Ghana and Togo has been closed. We know why), how is this Akufo-Addo positioning
himself? I guess that he is just waiting for the opposition to spring a
surprise and then dash down to Lome to do what he has done in Nigeria.
A tireless leech sucking the
blood of politicians in these countries whose sun seems to be rising while his
own gradually and steadily sets?
Here is the history to ponder
over. Under the late Gnasingbe Eyadema (a notorious and monstrous leader who
was a good pal of former President Kufuor), the NPP had everything to celebrate
in the Ghana-Togo relations, clearly to spite the Rawlings phenomenon.
Under Faure Gnasingbe, the
situation isn't so anymore because both Faure and Ghana's post-Kufuor leaders
(Atta Mills and John Mahama) are on very good terms, moving their countries
where they should be in terms of bilateral relations and development projects.
The outcome of the elections in
Togo are quite predictable: a resounding victory for Faure, which will send the
opposition reeling head-over-heels in useless agitations. What will Akufo-Addo
do in that circumstance? Commiserate with the defeated opposition to strengthen
their (or his own) resolve to work for a change, or simply disregard the Togo
case as inconsequential to his ambitions?
Why isn't the NPP any more
interested in cementing ties with Togo or Burkina Faso (whose Blaise Compaore
was Kufuor's pal)? And the Ivory Coast too?
Clearly, Akufo-Addo's kind of
politics is zig-zag. We recall how he went touring the neighbouring states in
2008 before the general elections to create the impression that he had already
won the bid to become Ghana's President. He lost big time and lost again in
2012. I don't think that 2016 will redeem him either.
So, by hob-nobbing with Nigeria's
Buhari, he seems to be setting his eyes on a prize that remains elusive. The
land of honey and milk is near yet so far for him. Just because he is not
well-cut-out to lead anybody (including himself) there. It takes more than this
mere public posturing to win electoral victory. Will he ever get to know this
truth?
Folks, let's return to the
current issue. Akufo-Addo's desperate efforts to be relevant are legendary. He
is so avid for political power as to do anything any how. Being with Gen.
Buhari to pick anything at all from the leaf as he prepares to stake his (ill)
luck again is a clear confirmation of that agenda. Is it coming too late for
him?
True, the Nigerian voters
rejected Jonathan Goodluck and his PDP for reasons best known to them.
Ghanaians may have their own reasons to inform the choices that they will make
on Election Day in 2016. They know that the Nigerian situation isn't similar to
the Ghanaian one (even though some NPP people have drawn parallels at the level
of economic malaise, incompetence, security, and many others relevant to their
anti-Mahama politics).
By snuggling to Gen. Buhari this
way, Akufo-Addo is exposing his underbelly. He did same in swallowing back his
own saliva and snuggling to Rawlings before Election 2012 but hasn't since then
had any interaction with Rawlings, which betrays him as a shameless opportunist.
The truth is that Rawlings won't forgive him for his role in the public
humiliation that he suffered under Kufuor (especially when Akufo-Addo was the
Minister of Justice and Attorney-General).
All these happenings present
Akufo-Addo in a light that he doesn't have the gift of foresight to see as
likely to blight his electoral chances. In politics, this kind of calculated
ambivalence leads to nothing but electoral disaster.
I am tempted to conclude that
what Akufo-Addo has seen in Buhari's strategies for winning the elections will
not apply to the Ghanaian situation; thus, any ill-thought-of implementation of
such strategies will definitely backfire.
In truth, Gen. Buhari's personal
accomplishments (as a former head of state) and personal integrity and his
pinpointed desire to clamp down on the Boko Haram terrorist organization
tearing Nigeria apart can be adduced as positive aspects of what won him the
elections. Is it the same for Akufo-Addo?
I shall return…
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