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Mary Chinery-Hesse and the
Intellectuals
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Ghanadot
Mrs. Mary Chinery-Hesse is Chief Advisor to Ghanaian
President John Kufour. That means we read President
Kufour through her, in terms of the thoughts, nuances
and the level of reasoning within the presidency. In
spite of her statement on July 25, 2007 (Ghanadot.com/Ghana
News Agency) that Ghanaian “intellectuals urged not to
shy away from discourse of national import,” she had
earlier challenged policy-makers and consultants, more
generally, Ghanaian elites, to use languages, more
appropriately, the English language, which Ghanaians
will understand. Her experiences dealing with
policy-makers and the booming Accra-based consultants
have taught her that sometimes even the language they
use the presidency and the larger bureaucratic circles
do not understand. Factor in the mass of Ghanaians who
do not read and speak the English language and calculate
the implications for Ghana’s progress.
But despite the relevance of her observations drawn from
her mingling with Ghanaian and non-Ghanaian
policy-makers, bureaucrats and consultants over the
years, Chinery-Hesse has missed one crucial thing, a
crucial thing, as the Botswanans will tell her, that has
affected Ghana’s progress for the good part of her
50-year corporate existence – the exclusion of Ghanaian
norms, values and traditions in not only policy-makings,
bureaucratizing, and consultancies but also
intellectualizing, thinking and philosophizing about
Ghana’s progress. In “The Political Foundations of
Development: The Case of Botswana,” Scott A. Beaulier
(of Mercer University, USA) and J. Robert Subrick
(George Mason University, USA), make the case that
unlike other sub-Saharan African states, Botswana has
prospered, for the past 25 years running, by its
skillful ability to successfully appropriate its norms,
values and traditional institutions in policy-making,
bureaucratizing, consultancies, thinking and
philosophizing about the country’s progress. And this
has come about, in a mixture of raw wisdom, wonderful
understanding of their environment and pragmatism, by
its elites, most educated abroad, and its traditional
leaders pursuing policies that legitimized their
democracy, political and traditional institutions, and
progress. “The interaction of these factors explains
Botswana’s success.”
Unlike Botswana, Ghanaian norms, values, and traditions,
50 years after freedom from British colonial rule, are
yet to be reflected decisively in policy-making,
bureaucratizing and consultancies. More seriously,
Ghanaian elites, as directors of progress, are yet to
participate as fully as other African elites, such as
South Africa, Kenya and Botswana, in national discourse
in Ghana’s progress. In any country, you gauge how well
its elites participate in its national discourse in its
progress in the mass media. Chinery-Hesse thinks, once
again from her interaction with the intellectuals, that
they “consider the sharing of information through the
media as demeaning of high academic achievement.” Pretty
heartbreaking but she is right and the reasons may be as
varied as anybody can imagine or have experienced.
In a response to my article, “Awakening Suppressed
Traditional Institutions” (ghanaweb, 2007-07-15), a
respondent wrote, “Publishing in obscure outlets and
that makes you a 'thinker.' What credible publication do
you have to your credit?” How anti-progress and gross
stupidity and how the intellectual ceiling! The sense
here is that Ghanaian elites should not publish in the
country’s mass medium because they are mediocre and do
not count in the country’s progress. This affects
national discourse and the development process in terms
of critically diagnosing the inadequacies within the
development process. Perhaps unaware of this climate,
Chinery-Hesse says “it was necessary for the
intellectuals and professionals to continue to educate
the public on issues they had expertise on” so as to
brighten the path of progress. The ghanaweb.com
respondent, suggestive of pretty much of the mass of the
respondents, wants Ghanaian elites rather concerned
themselves with academic mediums. It is not only the
developed world but in African states like Kenya, South
Africa, Nigeria and Botswana, the intellectuals get
involved in national discourse heavily through the mass
media as a way of illuminating the development path,
more so in societies with disturbing ignorance that
sometimes threaten to collapse the state as we saw in
Liberia, the northern part of Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire and
Sierra Leone.
Chinery-Hesse, as tracker of national discourse in her
advisabilities to President Kufour, is aware of this
missing link in Ghana’s progress and advises
“intellectuals and professionals with requisite
knowledge on issues of national importance being
discussed in the public domain not to shy away from the
discourse.” And what will be the implications in
progress? The intellectuals should not relent in
participating despite the demeaning climate, as we read
on ghanaweb.com. On her part, Chinery-Hesse adds that,
“by shying away to join the silent majority of docile
listeners, they left the scene for those who might not
be knowledgeable to fill the vacuum. They should not
feel shy to participate in this manner, and they should
not consider the sharing of information through the
[mass] media as demeaning of high academic achievement.”
Apart from fear of politicking by the increasingly
divisive political atmosphere and some politically
charged media houses, some Ghanaian intellectuals retire
away from participating in national discourse via the
mass media because of fear of some moral and
disciplinary flaws in the society. “The insults are
too…I have not seen this anywhere…You want to write
comments on some issues disturbing Ghana but the
responses are normally insults, for nothing,” a
professor at a Canadian university told me. Dr. George
Amponsem, a Ghanaian-Canadian economist and a
Toronto-based business consultant for International
Business Machines (IBM), told me recently that for some
time during the earlier days of Ghana’s most popular web
site, www.ghanaweb.com, a good number of Ghanaian
intellectuals such as Dr. George Ayittey and Dr. Kofi
Ellison, used to write for the web site on pressing
national issues. But then, in the course of time, they
fizzled out! Why? “The insults were too much and
shocking…It was as if these intellectuals have wronged
anyone by simply discussing national issues
critically…So they stopped…And the result is what you
see today on ghanaweb…Terrible…As if the ordinary
Ghanaian cannot think, are so weak that the only way to
engage in serious national issues is insult, insult, and
insulting self-respecting people who have not offended
them in any way but are just participating in national
discourse to lighten up the development path.”
So come to think of Ghanaian elites not participating in
national discourse for progress, Chinery-Hesse, her
policy-making and consultants circles, short of their
input of Ghanaian norms, values and traditions in their
functions, should consider how the sharing of
information through the mass media by the intellectual
is stifled by an atmosphere that is demeaning.
Kofi
Akosah-Sarpong, Canada, July 30, 3007
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