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Anchoring the future to the past, Kufuor

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Ghanadot

February 02, 2007

Two things have happened, as a result of the election of Kufuor in 2000 to the presidency of Ghana. The country has rediscovered itself and the civilized world has regained its confidence in us.

And to crown it all, in January 2007, at a meeting of heads of state of AU countries, President Kufuor was chosen by his peers to be the chair for this continental organization for the next 12 months; a selection which was an honor for both Ghana and Kufuor.

The appointment coincided with the 50th anniversary of Ghana’s independence and that was a plus too.  Kufuor, naturally, was “overwhelmed” by it.

It has been a difficult passage for Africa since Ghana gained its independence in 1957.  And the past decade has been challenging because of the intemperate nature of leadership on the continent.

 

While some countries burned during this period, Ghana, for the past six years, has enjoyed a sober leadership under Kufuor. Consequently, she has maintained a steady course for development.

 

She has gone from a state of political immaturity and is fast on the way to one of settled, steady governance and economic prosperity.

Ghana has won kudos from many within the international community of nations because of Kufuor’s policies.

 

Last year alone, he garnered almost 1.3 billion dollars in aid for Ghana, most of it in grants.  The most famous one being the MCA compact with the US government, under which Ghana received 547 million dollars; meant for capacity building and to combat poverty.

The question, however, remains whether Ghana is now on track to achieve the development status imagined by Nkrumah, the first president of Ghana, at the time of independence.

 

The answer, after Kufuor’s guidance, should be positive, unless something else happens after his term in office.

Mark Doyle, the BBC correspondent, wrote a piece in 2005 in which he contrasted Ghana with Malaysia.

 

According to him, the two countries were “on economic par – equally poor” when they obtained independence from the British, but it became a different story much later with Malaysia becoming by far the richer.


He said, “The main architect of the economic boom years for Malaysia - the 1970s and 80s - was the recently retired Prime Minister, Dr. Mahathir Mohamad.”  

 

And that Dr. Mohamad told him that "Political stability is extremely important….Without political stability, there can be no economic development. People are not going to put money into a place where there is no certainty."

 

And how true that statement was, especially when it is juxtaposed to Nkrumah’s prior statement on the same issue today:  “Seek ye first the political kingdom…”  Nkrumah said at the beginning in the mid 50s politics in Ghana.


Ghana today is enjoying a level of political stability that many nations on the continent can envy.  Free speech abounds in her media, but it has to be remembered that the country’s democracy is still tenuous.


“We think the most important thing about democracy is the right to change the government through the ballot box... Freedom to destabilize the country is not something that we consider as a part of democracy."  Dr. Mahathir Mohamad told Doyle of the BBC.


Not that Ghana lacks citizens with the desire to destabilize the country’s fledgling democracy under Kufuor, as happened under Nkrumah, and later augmented by the machinations of our known serial coup-makers within the country. 

 

But the experience so far has been that try as these folks would, Kufuor, with his mild-mannered temperament, has so far denied them the spark with which to cause the upheaval.

 

By his style of governance, Kufuor has forced Ghanaians to reminisce on the bitter lessons of the 60s, 70s, and 80s.  These experiences have made it doubtful whether Ghanaians would risk the stability of the 2000s for empty rhetoric that promotes bloody revolutions.


Under Kufuor, the constant threat of coups has been removed.  Rawlings, the chief serial coup maker, has had his turn in office.  And for 19 years, did nothing that justified the bloody counter-revolution that pockmarked his rule.

 

But Rawlings may not know it.  Thus, he continues to fume and threaten peace.  But in reality, he is just as spent as an extinct volcano.

In place of Rawlings, we have Kufuor; a man who has proven himself temperamentally suited for his time and job.  A man who has the necessary patience for the maintenance of peace under all sorts of challenges, outright abuses, and taunts.  

 

He has indeed proven to be a leader with the common sense, strength, and quietude that Ghana needs as she makes her journey into the future.

And because of this Kufuor has come to be known around the world as the gentle giant.


Some would rather credit Ghana’s good fortune to one episode; the peaceful transition of power from the NDC to the NPP.  

 

For them, it is not Kufuor that has caused the good things to happen to the country.  Rather, it is because of the peaceful transition and the enabling circumstance created by their magnanimity in 2000 that allowed the change to happen; meaning Rawlings’ willingness to step down.


While the thought implied with the peaceful transition statement is good, subsequent acts of Rawlings after the transition belie this claim.  Ghana has a stable government today because the country by 2000 got fed up after 19 years of bloodshed and empty but emotive rhetoric. 

 

The victory achieved in the election of 2000 is certainly providential, but it was brought about through the hard work of an experienced and a very seasoned politician and not a gift bestowed on Ghana by the peaceful transition proponents.

 

The real peaceful transition will come when Kufuor leaves office.

A peaceful transition is what happens in civilized societies during elections or when governments change hands. However, in our society so far it has been brutish.  To be judged as a civilized nation, we will need peaceful transitions in governance.

As the record stands today, there was a peaceful transition from the British to the Nkrumah regime (seemingly).  After that, transitions have been downhill and brutish; predominant military and mob rules, in our country.


Indeed, we didn’t see a brutish military-style takeover in 2000.  But we should not do a disservice to the marvel that happened in 2000.


On that note, we observe that the rest of the world is responding positively to our change in the style of transition and are becoming aware of our incipient political maturity.

 

African heads of states, seeking to avoid the embarrassment presented by Sudan in Darfur, have chosen President Kufuor to lead the continent.


This turn in African affairs is a come from behind story of the continent.  Not since the days of Nkrumah has Ghana enjoyed such recognition and prestige among her peers on the continent.  


Hopefully, we will soon hear from the political malcontents at home, not with a steady propaganda diet of some feigned legacy of a peaceful transition bequeathed to Kufuor in 2000, but with how muted their grievances become before and after Kufuor leaves office.

 

It is only then when we will know the true nature of what they mean by the peaceful transition. 

 

For this writer, it will be true only if the positives of Kufuor's policies are left intact and not reversed should the opposition party come to power the next time.


E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com, Washington, February 2, 2007.

Permission to publish: Please feel free to publish or reproduce, with credits, unedited. If posted on a website, email a copy of the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com. Or don't publish at all.


 

   

 

 

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