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THE GA MANTSE GOES TO ACCRA
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong,
Ghanadot
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong looks at the newly installed Ga
Mantse, Nii Tackie Tawiah III, king of Ghana’s Ga ethnic
group, attempts to work with the overburdened Accra
Metropolitan Assembly to tackle developmental problems
For sometime as its population grew and rural-urban
migration soared, the City of Accra, Ghana’s capital
city, is experiencing rising developmental problems.
While local indigenes complain of the central government
appropriating their ancestral lands for official state
duties without any compensation, the city managers,
Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA), have been riddled
with worsening sanitation problems. For sometime, the Ga
ethnic group and other Ghanaians have been wondering how
to solve the sanitation problems of the City of Accra.
Prominent Ga intellectuals such as Dr. Daniel Tetteh
Osabu-Kle, a former Greater Accra Regional Minister and
a political scientist at Canada’s Carleton University,
have suggested that the unused Ga traditional rulers,
like most traditional rulers in Ghana, should be cycled
and be brought in, as part of the human resources
management of AMA, to help solve the city’s mounting
problems.
It is in this rising consciousness that the newly
installed Ga Mantse (King of the Ga ethnic group), Nii
Tackie Tawiah III, is warming up to what he describes as
the City of Accra’s sanitation situation exhibiting the
“pain” of the degradation “of the city of his
ancestors.” In the spirit of Ghanaian/African values of
communalism, the King is “going to muster his
subordinate chiefs to support the AMA in salvaging the
face of the city which today is anything but decent.”
Like other city managers of Ghana’s cities, AMA has not
reflected authentically the environment it operates in,
for long blinded from the huge traditional human
resources waiting to be tapped for development. King Nii
Tackie Tawiah III's new thinking indicates a new turn in
the development process of not only Ghana’s Greater
Accra Region but also the entire country, where
traditional institutions, with its rich potency and
experiences, are being appropriated in the larger
progress of Ghana – from the local to the regional to
the national.
For long, attempts to build up Ghana, as a development
project, have not been holistic, the ruling neo-liberal
values not mixing proportionately with the local
indigenous values as other ex-colonies such South Korea,
Japan, Malaysia and Vietnam have done. For the better
part of Ghana’s 50 years of corporate existence, either
way, the neo-liberal structures have not gone to the
traditional institutions and vice versa. Now for the
first time in the climate of the growing calls for the
hybridization of indigenous values with neo-liberal
ones, as part of the broader re-tooling of indigenous
cultural-developmental continuity, the traditional is
going to the neo-liberal – King Nii Tackie Tawiah III is
going to the Accra Metropolitan Assembly to help solve
one its irritating developmental problems – sanitation.
The King’s complaining of the degradation of the Ga
ancestral lands is instructive. In African cultural
context, you don’t debase your ancestral properties such
as rivers, beaches, lakes and lands as the sanitation
situation in the City of Accra shows. African culture
extols balances between man and the environment in its
development process. This is in contrast to the
neo-liberal paradigm of anthropocentrism, where man
dominates the environment to the exclusion of other
entities. Pretty much of the environmental problems we
are facing today are because of the dormant
anthropocentric practices.
Such view may be at the forefront of King Nii Tackie
Tawiah III plans. The reasons for the King surmounting
the traditional will to go to AMA to help in its
sanitation problems have both historical and structural
implications. Though during the long-running colonial
rule the British used traditional institutions in its
governance, post-independent Ghanaian elites did not,
partly setting the stage for some of the developmental
distortions today. From its initial stage, first
President Kwame Nkrumah’s harsh marginalized traditional
rulers, as the stronghold of Ghana’s progress,
explaining why King Nii Tackie Tawiah III have to go to
AMA in 2007 to help solve the disturbing sanitation
problems.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, May
30, 2007
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