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Irrationalizing the Ghanaian
Parliament
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
Apart from national struggles for comfortable life such
as good drinking water, proper sanitation practices,
adequate food, shelter, sound healthcare, peace, among
others, Ghanaians are increasingly coming to the
conclusion that certain cultural practices pose
challenges to their progress and need to be refined.
In the past years there have been Ghana-wide campaigns
to attempt to refine some of these hampering cultural
practices such as female genital mutilation, juju,
ritual murders, witchcraft, early marriage, Pull
Him/Her/Them Down syndrome, etc.
The Ghanaian Parliament has been involved in refining
some of these destructive cultural practices through
legislations informed by human rights values. But the
new parliament, elected on December 7, is evenly
divided. The new ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC)
has 114 Members of Parliament (MPs), the main opposition
New Patriotic Party (NPP) has 107 MPs and others 7 MPs.
This “hung parliament” will need superb democratic
dance, as part of Ghana’s democratic growth, by the
majority NDC to drive through its bills in the face of
the much more democratic savvy NPP minority that sees
the NDC democratic antecedents as suspect. (The NDC
owner ex-president Jerry Rawlings has told the New York
Times that his military junta PNDC was forced by the US
State Department to democratize. The British diplomat,
Craig Murray, who served in Ghana from 1998 to 2002,
indirectly says the 1992 and 1996 general elections were
rigged by Rawlings and his associates).
The picture that emerges is on-again, off-again showdown
in the new legislature, making the NDC sense that
winning the 2008 elections may not be as easy as rolling
their policies through the even legislature. But such
democratic atmosphere will be one of the fodders for
Ghana’s democratic enlargement and will test how the new
legislators will appropriate Ghanaian traditional and
democratic values of consensus and participation in
resolving contentious legislative issues without
undermining national development.
Instead of rationally using democratic and traditional
consensus mechanisms to resolve any gridlock that may
crop-up in future legislative works, the Accra-based
Daily Guide, part of the mass media in the forefront of
cultural enlightenment, reports that some NDC MPs have
resorted to the old dreaded juju spiritual rituals to
resolve any anticipated deadlock that might crop up in
parliamentary businesses. The target is the NPP Minority
leader Osei Kyei Mensah-Bonsu in particular and the
entire NPP parliamentary caucus.
Writes Daily Guide, “A piece of the parliamentary juju
has been reportedly fixed beneath the chair of the
Minority Leader and Member of Parliament for Suame, Hon.
Osei Kyei Mensah-Bonsu, apparently to subdue and charm
him into a moron. This is happening at a time when
Parliament is almost evenly divided between the Majority
and Minority caucuses and every effort is being made to
subdue political opponents in the Legislature.
“A parliamentary staff disclosed to Daily Guide that a
group of ‘mallams’ and people believed to be occult
grand-masters were seen spraying a sweet-scented
substance and murmuring some strange-sounding
incantations in the main Chamber of the House during the
late hours of Tuesday January 6, 2009. Indeed, on the
next day when Hon Kyei Mensah-Bonsu took his seat in the
Chamber, he felt uneasy in the chair and immediately
drew the attention of the House to the fact that he
suspected there was something amiss about the seat.”
While this may look scary, morally reprehensible and
bordering on criminality, with its traditional spiritual
consequences, the implications are far-reaching,
bordering on the health of rationality and civility of
the parliamentarians involved, and the signal it sends
to Ghanaians and other Africans. It also undermines the
on-going Ghana-wide campaigns to refine certain
destructive cultural values, of which juju is one of
them, in the development process.
Surprised? Not necessarily! Almost two months ago,
Gershon Kofi Bediako Gbediame, the NDC MP for Nkwanta
South was reported by the Daily Guide to be involved in
high-frequency juju dabbling that went bad (as they
always do) and during “a meeting with some party
executives (in the run up to the December 7 general
elections) when suddenly he began screaming and was
about to run but was restrained by those around him.”
Gbediame had strange nightmares and some sort of mental
illness and no peace-of-mind.
And, if some MPs are juju-minded, how can they handle
complicated developmental issues that demand higher
reasoning and wisdom as Ghana increasingly veers to
re-position itself as the “Black Star of Africa” that
has enlightenment implications for the rest Africa. The
insight into “parliament hit by juju” is that some MPs
have still not explicated themselves from such frightful
cultural practices despite almost all the MPs being
university graduates, some with extensive global
exposure.
As the number one centre for reasoning, consensus
building and participation, the Ghanaian parliament is
expected to radiate enlightenment against the backdrop
of developmental challenges but the juju incident
reveals it is still stuck in the dark side of the
Ghanaian culture. The MPs involved in the juju incident
brains, molded by their culture, as Richard Nisbett
indicates in The Geography of Thought and Norman
Doidge’s The Brain That Changes Itself, refuse to let
the rational part of their brains to resolve the
challenges that may occur in the businesses of the hung
parliament.
Still, on the juju MPs’ brains, while the scientific
side of their minds demand objective evidence as to why
they should plant juju and other charms on the chair of
the Minority leader and the parliamentary chamber, their
brains’ mythopoeic, irrational juju-thinking side entice
them to irrational marvels – to the believe that a juju
“fixed beneath the chair of the Minority Leader” will
“apparently to subdue and charm him to be “a moron,” or
stupid or a manipulable figure, so that the NDC, which
has to navigate through a tough parliament, can easily
influence the Minority leader and the NPP parliamentary
group in order to pass legislative bills no matter how
unrealistic they may seem.
The Ghanaian parliament is the key reflector of the
country’s elites and the juju incident reflect the
elites’ minds – a peculiar psychic disturbance where
deadly negative superstition roams supreme against
rational choices that calls for consensus building. A
people whose elites’ mind is overly dominated by
irrational parts of their culture and brain cannot think
well and will find it difficult to draw from their
traditional wisdom and the global prosperity ideals for
progress.
Juju places limits on reasoning, thinking, reflection,
contemplation and rationalization, for it makes the
dabbler perpetually in a nervous state of anxiety – one
cannot think well in such a state. Juju is dark; it
weakens analysis and makes it very difficult to
rationalize dire developmental issues. Juju jams the
mind, beclouding it. Juju opens the emotional parts of
the brain more than the rational parts, making the
dabbler juvenile to the point of self-destruction – the
MPs involved in the juju incident aim to decimate the
Ghanaian parliament by stupefying the NPP caucus.
Still, juju can make one person destroy another without
considering the consequences – Samuel Doe’s Liberian
politicians should inform Ghanaian MPs. In a way, juju
can make one overly wicked and inhuman. Despite being
spiritual, because it is a negative spirituality, juju
makes the dabbler spiritually weak – but the dabbler may
feel, falsely, that he/she is spiritually strong a la
Samuel Doe. Juju makes emotions outweigh principles and
facts. Juju feeds the ego, makes the dabbler very
egocentric, and either weakens or destroys the human
element of humility and love – once again, Samuel Doe
will teach Ghanaian MPs one or two lessons of the vastly
deadly aftermaths of juju in politics.
No doubt, juju is highly sort after by Ghanaian “Big
Men” and “Big Women” in their ego trips as is the case
with the MPs involved in the “juju hit parliament”
episode. And if in 2009 a country’s parliament, a forum
for healthy debates, is heavily involved in irrational
juju practices, in a world of growing reasoning,
high-powered researches, rationalization, and the
remarkable intellectual feat of Barack Obama, then the
country has deep-seated problems in its progress, for it
can’t confront developmental challenges critically that
will need high-level thinking, with “no bias, no bulls,”
as CNN’s Campbell Brown would say.
This also raises the issue of trust, which cut across
NDC or NDC or any political partisanship, in
parliamentary consensus building that will need higher
political dexterity and not any destructive juju charms
intended to irrationally influence legislative works.
Juju makes the MPs suspicious of each other and
undermines trust, a key element in progress, of which
the MPs are supposed to be directors. But the directors
are mentally stifled if juju entangles it.
In Trust: The Social Virtues and the Creation of
Prosperity, Francis Fukuyama explains that progress at
any human level is driven by trust - a social capital
that glues and bonds people and societies together to
act voluntarily. Fear of juju undo the voluntary
traditional bonding expected of the MPs in their
legislative works.
That MPs would go to
parliamentary chambers looking over their shoulders and
chairs for fear of some destructive juju-marabout
schemes cast on them and not able to think well enough
about legislative works is primitive, un-Ghanaian and
counter-productive.
“Juju in parliament” undermines the majestic,
deliberative and the broader mechanisms of democracy and
freedoms that Ghana, against all odds for the past 17
years, have been painstakingly growing and
enthusiastically positioning itself to export to the
rest of Africa.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong,
Canada, January 22, 2009
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