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Commentary
Page
We
invite commentaries from writers all over. The subject is about
Ghana and the world. We reserve the right to accept or reject submissions,
but we are not necessarily responsible for the opinions expressed
in articles we publish......MORE
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Ghana stakes
regional influence on democracy
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
The highly successful general elections in Ghana have revived
its former clout as the centre of Pan Africanism where other
African states came to drink from its ideals and hope. Now
instead of radical Pan Africanism with its leftists
sloganeering, Ghana is emerging as the centre of genuine
democracy and freedoms in an African which democracy and
freedoms are anything but.
Since the triumphant second run-off presidential election on
January 2 that saw John Evans Atta Mills winning by just over
40,000 votes, perhaps the most neck-to-neck presidential polls
in Africa of recent memory, the whole Africa, more the stability
challenged West African region, has been fired up, enjoying in
Ghana’s success. African democrats, intellectuals and ordinary
people talk of Ghana’s rise and its re-position as the “Black
Star of Africa.” While Ghana may not be rich like Nigeria or
South Africa or Libya, its radiation of hope and ideals is more
the result of its democratic and freedoms growth.
Ghana’s developing democracy has touched base with its ancient
Pan Africanism ideals and hope that the new ruling National
Democracy Congress (NDC), which is made up of Nkrumaist Pan
Africanists, embodies. It is not surprising that just a week
into their rule the NDC has stated that it will “vigorously
pursue African unity as part of its foreign policy.” Though the
NDC is aware that for the past five decades Ghana’s foreign
policy hasn’t changed, in a partisan manner it thought Ghana
under President John Kufuor “de-emphasis on African Unity.”
De-emphasized or not, the revival of African unity as Ghana’s
foreign policy is as result of democratic growth for the past 17
years and its unique success in a region where democracy and
freedoms have been sham and threat of instability hovering. As
the UN warned last year stability of Sierra Leone and Liberia is
still suspect. Former Liberian warlord Prince Yomi Johnson,
whose unit killed former president Samuel Doe, has warned
against a witch-hunt by the country’s Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, which leaked report, intends to arrest him, among
others, and “vowed to resist any effort to arrest him.”
This should inform President Mills and his NDC that any foreign
policy driven by African unity and attempts at African unity
today have to be cooked in a Ghana that projects greater
democracy, rule of law and freedoms. This makes the revival of
Ghana’s leadership position in Africa, especially it’s thought
of futuristic West African integration, a democratic and
freedoms act.
West Africa, the poorest region in the world, for some time the
most instable and for long military coups ridden area, would not
just be integrated from empty Pan African rhetoric as was the
case some fifty years ago. The integration architecture, as a
Pan African act, has to be driven by certain common values that
are democracy and freedoms, as Africans’ and world’s praise of
Ghana after the January 2 presidential election indicate.
Whether under Ghana’s first President Kwame Nkrumah or any
president for that matter, the integration of West Africa cannot
occur in a region where there are unfreedoms, threats of civil
wars, violation of the rule of law, fears and harassment,
endemic corruption, high octane ethnicity and stifling of
democratic aspiration. The Gambia is yet to account for its
killing of some 40 Ghanaians and other Africans. The new Vice
President John Mahama, as an NDC opposition figure, had
suggested stein position on the Gambian issue and, if possible,
cut-off relations with the Gambia. Democracies do not cut each
other off; democracies do not fight, democracies much more
co-operative as the global experiences demonstrate. The
resolving of the Gambian issue would be done better in a West
Africa where all the governments are as democratic and freedoms
driven as Ghana is exuding now.
While the global praise of Ghana’s democracy and freedoms
ascendancy demonstrates the reach, influence and power Ghana has
acquired, it also provides President Mills, who isn’t known as
democracy and freedoms struggler, and didn’t campaign on such
ideals during the 2008 general elections, as was his main
contestant Nana Akufo-Addo of the now opposition New Patriotic
Party (NPP), with the convenient room to wrap his intended
African unity and West African integration around democracy and
freedoms.
The only real threat to President Mills’s African unity and West
African integration vision lie in de-emphasizing democracy and
freedoms, as medicine to cure West Africa’s long simmering
instability as the region’s body, Ecowas, cut-off Guinea from
its fold, which transition government was overthrown by its
military after President Lansana Conteh died on December 23. Or
just revert to the old, empty Pan Africanism that had no innate
African values driving it or that wasn’t tied to the global
prosperity ideals driven by democracy, rule of law and freedoms
but the same old, same old anti-imperialism jingles. West Africa
is still waiting to see whether Mauritania’s military junta will
revert the country to constitutional rule by June this year as
it promised.
Other African states that have pump-up by Ghana to take its long
lost leadership position in Africa were moved by Ghana’s rising
beautiful democracy and freedoms, and not any undemocratic and
unfreedoms that characterized attempts at African unity and West
African regional integration 50 years ago during the era of
Nkrumah, Sekou Toure, Siaka Stevens, Dauda Jawara, and William
Tubman. Today, Ghana’s stake in regional influence would be
informed by democracy and freedoms.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong,
Canada, January 14, 2009
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Veep
pledges Gov't Support to Ghanaian Businesses
Accra, Jan 15, Ghanadot - The vice president, John Dramani Mahama, has pledged government support to
improve institutional capacity and the adoption of
appropriate technologies to make Ghanaian businesses
competitive......More
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Prez Mills' Promise of Change is a Political
Gimmick-Dr. Arthur Kennedy
Accra, Jan 15, Ghanadot - The communications director of
the Akufo-Addo campaign team for Election 2008, Dr
Arthur Kennedy, has stated that contrary to Prof Mills’
promises to “hit the ground running,” the President
rather “hit the ground crawling.”....More |
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Ghana stakes
regional influence on democracy
Commentary, Jan 15, Ghanadot -
The highly successful general elections in Ghana have revived
its former clout as the centre of Pan Africanism where other
African states came to drink from its ideals and hope. Now
instead of radical Pan Africanism with its leftists
sloganeering.......More
|
|
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DC leadership asked to help stop
opposition intimidations
Tamale, Jan. 14, Ghanadot/GNA – Mr. Clifford Abdallah
Braimah, Northern Regional Secretary of the New Patriotic
Party (NPP) has asked the leadership of the National
Democratic Congress (NDC) to help stop the alleged
intimidations being perpetrated on perceived political
opponents......More |
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