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Parliament,
Reasoning, and Development
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong,
Ghanadot
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong mulls Ghanaian law-makers’
criminalization of Female Genital Mutilation
The criminalization of Female Genital Mutilation, part
of some of the cultural inhibitions stifling Ghana’s
progress, by the Parliament of Ghana, indicates attempts
to rediscover the state from its roots. It raises the
fact that, unlike years ago, the elected representatives
are expanding their thinking in relation to Ghanaian
norms, values and traditions in Ghana’s progress. The
act simultaneously touts the good aspects of the
Ghanaian culture and also attempts to refine the ancient
cultural inhibitions that have been stifling Ghana’s
development process. At deeper level, there is clear
demonstration that the law-makers, as the key face of
Ghanaian elites and prominent directors of progress, are
increasingly having fuller grasp of Ghana’s development
process.
Still, by this act, including the heated debate it
generated, as the Ghana News Agency (June16, 2007)
reported, the elites are “rediscovering the state,” from
the roots of its original Ghanaian indigenous values,
and “starting to consider the challenges ahead,” as the
inhibitions within the values of the 56 ethnic groups
that make-up Ghana nation-state pop up now and then in
the drive for progress. The Ghana nation-state cannot
work harmoniously if there are huge in-built unrefined
inhibiting values that stifle it. The attempts are not
only to refine the inhibitions within the culture but
intellectualize it, enlighten it, as Prof. Kojo Yankah,
of the University of Ghana, would say, for progress. For
years, such inhibiting cultural practices such as the
destructive Pull Him Down syndrome (Prof. Kwesi Andam,
of University of Science and Technology, thinks is
partly responsible for the decline of the once
prosperous Fanteland); immense dabbling in the
irrational juju-marabout mediums that twists
reasoning(coup-makers used this and nearly blew Ghana
into pieces); human sacrifice (there are campaigns
Africa-wide to stop this practices); and the excessive
interpretation of events as caused by witchcraft and not
human agency, have impacted negatively on Ghana’s
progress.
As the main centre for national reasoning and
reflection, as the fountain of human rights, effectively
human refinement, as the key forum of national
struggles, and the main juggler of the contending issues
of a nation-state slightly founded on the wrong footing,
the Parliament of Ghana refracts both the inhibitions
and the positive parts of Ghanaian values and
traditions, its ex-colonial legacies and the deftness to
appropriate as much as practicable global development
values for Ghana’s progress. In this sense, the
Parliament has huge task, unlike years past, to deal
with not only the emerging challenges but the good parts
of Ghanaian values and the inhibiting parts such as a
shrine near Kumasi ritually sacrificing deformed babies
for host of material demands from juju-marabout-minded
Ghanaians. How do you change such thinking in the larger
development process?
Such long-running counter-productive cultural practices
have led some critical observers to question African
elites inability to boldly attempt to refine them and
led to all sort of views about Africa’s values,
especially as science grow globally and certain human
events are thought not to be caused by demons, divine
feat, evil spirits, or unforeseen forces. From afar and
inside Africa, some observers have argued that
Ghanaian/African elites cannot think and have no
confidence in their own values as critical domains for
progress. The German thinker, Friedrich Hegel, thought
that Africans cannot think or are philosophically weak.
The late Senegalese President, Leopold Senghor, perhaps
influenced by Hegel, thought Africans cannot think and
brought in Europeans when he has developmental
challenges. The Ghanaian law-makers are saying today
that both Hegel and Senghour were wrong, that Africans
can think from within their values in the global
perspective in the context of their norms, values and
traditions. Hence, the criminalization of FGM.
Either from the twisted views of Hegel or Senghor, which
pretty much reflected the jaundiced European views of
Africa’s values and traditions, as the French would tell
you with their warped view that Africans needed to be
“civilized” because they cannot think and are
“primitive,” there have been long-running perception
that African elites, after freedom from colonial rule,
have not been able to intellectually come out with the
thinking that allows them to model their progress from
within their norms, values and traditions, and deal with
the emerging development challenges effectively. When
Ghana’s Dr. Y.K. Amoako, ex-chair of the Addis
Ababa-based UN’s Economic Commission for Africa,
observed that Africa is the only region in the world
where its development paradigms are foreign dominated,
Dr. Amoako was effectively saying that Africa’s elites
have not being able to overturn the European views of
the fact they are so weak that they cannot think from
within their values and need foreign values and
traditions to develop. Pretty much disturbing! The
contention is how Ghanaian/African elites can think
through their values and traditions to come out with
development paradigms that reflect their environment as
the Southeast Asians and other prosperous nation-states
throughout the world have done and are still doing a la
globalization.
One mistake Ghana’s Founding Fathers did was failing to
structure and direct the nation-state from within
Ghanaian values and traditions. If the Founding Father
had examined the contradictions and atrocities within
the values and traditions and laid them out for rigorous
refinement in Ghana’s progress, as the current
law-makers are attempting to do, the Founding Fathers
would have set the path, long ago, for enlightened
processes for progress. The criminalization of FGM, in
the broader context of nation-building, represents a
rebirth – indeed, a reconnection between the “state” (as
the political authority) and “nation” (as the root,
values and traditions) – since there are conscious
attempts to awaken the long-suppressed values,
appropriate the good parts and refine the inhibiting
aspects for national development.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Canada, June 19, 2007
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