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The sacred fire of accountability
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
The Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, admonition to
bureaucrats and politicians to be chary of
accountability is a bravely ambitions suggestion. The
unspoken wisdom through the Asantehene is that:
traditional Ghana has recovered its confidence, its
astuteness of goodwill, or anyway its gift for doing
things right openly in Ghana’s progress. The Asantehene
demonstrates that accountability is as traditional as it
is modern for progress.
Certain parts of the Ghanaian/African tradition fuel
corruption, as Jean-Francois Bayart explains in The
State in Africa: The Politics of the Belly, where in an
allegorical nepotistic, corrupt African state government
officials, businessmen and businesswomen, elites,
traditional linchpins and “Big Men,” sometimes with
backing of juju-marabout spiritual mediums and other
spiritualists, use their influence to “enrich
themselves, their families or ethnic kinsmen.”
The Asantehene, as traditional leader and accountant,
knows the destructive world of corruption in traditional
and modern African setting that has asphyxiate many an
African state’s progress. In Criminalisation of the
State in Africa, Jean-Francois Bayart, Stephen Ellis and
Beatrice Hibou argue that the growth of fraud and
smuggling in African states, the marauding of natural
resources, the privatization of state institutions, and
the development of an economy of plunder make garbage of
the state and the state itself becomes a vehicle for
organized criminal activity.
Unaccountability set Sierra Leone, Rwanda, the
Democratic Republic of Congo, Ivory Coast and Liberia on
flames. It saw the angry Jerry Rawlings executing some
military Big Men in Ghana; it saw Foday Sankoh
amputating, maiming, raping and counting-looting Sierra
Leone; it saw Liberia set on bonfire and President
Samuel Doe killed like an armed robber with his ears cut
off and paraded naked in public.
Unaccountability saw all sorts of despicable people
emerge on the African scene and further destroying
Africa. It saw “small boys” like Sierra Leone’s
Valentine Strausser and Samuel Doe waving matches and
playing on the volatile African political scene and
setting it on fire. At the extreme end, Liberians,
Sierra Leoneans, Kenyans, Congolese and Nigerians will
sadly tell you terrible stories about unaccountability
and how it has negated their progress despite their
immense natural wealth.
The Asantehene’s idea is to make the case that
accountability is as traditional as it is the soul of
modern democratic practices and that tradition can help
curb unaccountability. And the fact that how healthy a
society is, is revealed in how accountable it is unto
itself. The Asantehene’s traditional moral authority
makes him a perfect person to speak on accountability,
in a non-partisan position, throw light on a troubling
development cancer, and thus the darkness that hover on
unaccountability to recede a bit.
In African tradition, accountability, more called
judgment (since one has to pay for one’s actions and
face the consequences); the word as used by the
Asantehene, has a metaphysical ring, too. In a
complicated believe, Africans judge that what you are on
earth is how accountability you were in your previous
life – good, truthful, pure, balance life means your
next life would be devoid of too much headaches. It lays
more emphasis on the spiritual than the material, the
source of corruption. Accountability, therefore,
restrains one from extreme negative life on earth as
fodder for good life in your next life.
The metaphysics aside, accountability, as an anti-dote
to corrupt practices, hugely defines progress. The
American economist John Kenneth Galbraith, said “Hard,
visible circumstance defines reality.” The reality of
the African accountability campaigns is that it hasn’t
been addressed also from African culture, perhaps the
key source of corruption.
In the past 52 years, public accountability, despite
Rawlings’ executions, threats, exiling and blowing
markets into pieces, has been slow. Operating in
no-party, military juntas, with all democratic
antecedents muzzled, the almost 20 years of Rawlings
rule wasn’t openly accountable – for there was no
democratic daylight into Rawlings’ conclave. Watchdog
roles to track corruption were virtually nil.
Anti-corruption institutions were either weak or
none-existent compared to Nigeria that has set up the
remarkable Economic and Financial Crimes Commission to
tackle corruption. In the final analysis, Rawlings and
his associates are better of materially today than they
came to the Ghanaian political scene. In logic, in
Rawlings’ accountability universe we see that, “moral
concepts are lovely, but the key is governing these
things by law,” as Elena Bonner, widow of Russian human
rights campaigner Andrei Sakharov, said.
In Rawlings, who projects himself as chief-priest of
anti-corruption, accountability campaigns do not work in
authoritarian regimes but better under democracies as
Ghanaians are experiencing today under their 17-year
democratic dispensation and that has given the
Asantehene the platform to speak out on accountability.
In Rawlings, there are huge hypocrisy in the Ghanaian
accountability world, with the boundary between conflict
of interest and liability blurred. This makes public
accountability weak and at the mercy of the
powers-that-be instead of healthy public institutions to
deal with it. In Nigeria, a group of high ranking
military personnel, mostly during the Ibrahim Babangida
and Sani Abacha juntas, demonstrate the networked
nepotism characteristic of Bayart’s The Politics of the
Belly by looting billions of dollars. In his four short
years in power Abacha managed to embezzle over US$4
billion.
By talking about accountability, judgment and
corruption, the Asantehene opens the floodgate for
policy-makers to look also from the Ghanaian/African
culture when addressing corruption.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Canada, August
10, 2009
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Government to review Children’s Act
Accra, Aug. 10, Ghanadot/GNA – Government would
review the 1998 Children’s Act (Act 560) to assess the
extent of its implementation and effectiveness in order to
chart a new course for the country’s children, Mr Stephen
Amoanor Kwao Minister of Employment and Social Welfare,
stated in Accra on Monday....
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Friends bid farewell to H.E.
Fabrizio
Accra, Aug 10, Ghanadot- The outgoing Italian
Ambassador to Ghana, H.E. Fabrizio De-Agostini, and his wife
were over the weekend treated to a private farewell luncheon
by Mrs. Frances Akuete at her residence in Tema.
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Government to procure free school uniforms from China
Accra, Aug 10, Ghanadot - Authentic information
reaching Ghanadot revealed that the Government of Ghana is
on its way to procure fabric for free school uniforms from
China...
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Betty Mould, superstition and progress
Commentary, Aug 10, Ghanadot - Those
who think Africans are dull and cannot think should quietly
come to Ghana and view what is happening in the electrifying
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