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Leadership: A President from Ghana
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Ghanadot
As Ghana’s 2008 general elections closes in, what type
of leadership Ghana needs has become a recurring
subject, sometimes even unsettling, despite figures like
Prof. John Atta, Nana Akuffo Addo, Mr. Aliu Mahama and
Edward Mahama hovering on the scene. The broader views
are that Ghana needs a visionary leader to replace the
incumbent John Kufour in 2008. The Ghanaian media are,
as ever, obsessed with the leadership issue, too, as if
the democrartic dispensation, with its political parties
and insitutions, does not have a process of selecting
leaders to contest for offices and run the development
process. Some talks even border on autocracy and a blind
search for visionary leaders as you just go and pick
visionary leaders from anywhere despite the running
democratic institutions. Good or bad, the democratic
process selects its own leadership in an on-going
process.
Aptly, some of this worrying talks of leadership has
occured because of some utterances and behaviour by some
politicians (not that other African states’ are any
different, witness the acrimony in Nigeria in the
periods leading to its just ended general elections with
which the departed Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo
had sustained rancour with his deputy, Mr. Atiku
Abubakar, over petty issues, and some Sierra Leoneans
saying their learned politicians have destroyed their
country due to greed and selfishness). Former United
Nations chief scribe, Mr. Kofi Annan, and good number of
Ghanaian traditional rulers have advised Ghanaian
politicians to be civil, as Ghanaian traditions demand,
in their utterances as if they are some immatured group.
Prof. S. K. B. Asante, a long time figure in the
Ghanaian diplomatic and policy-making scene, has been so
unhappy with some of the emerging leadership concerns
that he described “some presidential aspirants” as
“living in fantasy world.”
The leadership conundrum is so unnerving to some
Ghanaians, at least some of its elites and some party
big-wigs or apparatchiks, that the thought emananting
from the political scene sometimes make it seem that
there are no leaders capable of tackling Ghana’s
progress. The impression is that some of the aspiring
leaders appear simultaneously not to know and understand
Ghana. This is when Kwame Nkrumah and J.B Danquah
floated away. Never satisfied and salivating for perfect
leadership, as if the world is perfect, critics argue
Nkrumah and Danquah were impatient; Kofi Busia and Hilla
Limman too slow and dull; and Jerry Rawlings too
hot-tempered and missed the great opportunity to make
Ghana a great nation.
Balanced leadership – that’s what some Ghanaians are
longing for. In this sense, some argue a John Kufour
leadership – simultaneously balanced and calm in the
face of not only opposition heckling but also a
Rawlingsian provocation. But Kufour emerged from the
democratic process, no matter how fragile it is, after
long years in the rough-and-tumble of the Ghanaian
political scene. Some Ghanaians think the long-running
military leaders are no better – no visionary among
them, troubled more or less by moral and disciplinary
problems. The argument in Ghanaian/African development
circles, drawing cases from other developing world, is
that the various military regimes should have used their
military might as a foundation for Ghana’s speedy
progress as South Korea, Chile and Brazile, among
others, did. The long-running military juntas also
stifled the growth of holistic leadership needed to
midwife democracy as a bulwak for progress.
It is from such despicable background that Prof. Asante
is worried about Ghana’s leadership and its impact on
democratic growth. “Democracy had come to stay in Ghana
but remained fragile enough to require a mature, strong,
steady, visionary and knowledgeable political leader to
protect it” (Aug 5, GNA). That’s democracy needs leaders
to grow it, and not just any type of leaders, but
leaders who have thorough grasp of Ghanaian history,
norms, traditions, values, and how to play this in the
global development game. With shadows of military coup
hanging at the background and some politicians’
utterances inimical to democratic growth, Prof. Asante,
like most Ghanaian democrats, is convinced that “this is
a crucial matter for high-level consideration by all the
political parties that are in the process of selecting
party flag bearers.”
In the final analysis, pretty much of the questions of
Ghanaian leadership today, as the progress of Southeast
Asia leaders and their countries demonstrate, involve
how confident are Ghanaian leaders - in themselves, in
their people, in their country’s progress, and, more
critically, in the foundational norms, values and
traditions that form and run the Ghana nation-state. In
a mixture of extremely long-running colonial rule, that
heavily suppressed African values and traditions for
growth, or post-independence African elites’ weak grasp
of Africa’s values and traditions in its progress,
Ghanaian/African leaders have had problems with
confidence in their leadership process within the
development process of their countries. And this may be
why Prof. Asante held that, "Indeed we need a leader who
has a deep and intimate appreciation of where this
country is coming from and where it needs to get in the
shortest possible time." That’s a leadership, no matter
the level, that have solidly thorough grasp of the core
Ghanaian environment.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong,
Canada, August 8, 2007
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