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The power of protest and
neutrality
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
Committee for Joint Action (CJA),
a pressure group known for protesting on national and
international issues during the years of ex-President
John Kufour, is fast evolving as non-partisan,
objective, and national conscience.
Over the years, CJA has evolved into part of Ghana’s
growing democratic governance culture, taking more or
less a centrist position that has allowed Ghanaians of
diverse political and religious beliefs to come together
for a common national cause without fear of persecution.
No doubt, Ghana has been ranked among the top 10
performers on the Ibrahim Index on African Governance,
the first comprehensive ranking of 48 sub-Saharan
African countries. The Ibrahim Index is a tool to hold
African governments accountable and frame the debate
about the quality of rule in Africa. Democracy driven,
its approach is based on scientific measurement of the
degree to which African governments deliver political
goods to their citizens, part of which involve the
degree of freedoms to voice out national concerns on
issues that worries them as the CJA is doing.
In appropriating Ghana’s flourishing democracy and
freedoms, the CJA seeks to knock some sense into the
status quo and broadly enrich the maturing democracy –
it doesn’t matter which individuals, political party or
institution, it is for greater national good,
philosophically.
Of course, any issue as appalling as perceived largesse
for ex-presidents becomes divisive enough to inspire
organized protest and raise powerful emotional
responses. The CJA’s protest against the implementation
of the Chinery Hesse Committee report on ex-gratia award
for ex-presidents reveals its emerging neutrality in its
national mission – some protesters hatred and political
prejudices aside.
The Chinery Hesse report looks like it was written for
ex-presidents/ex-prime ministers of the rich developed
countries and not poor, struggling Ghana, which is at
the lower 142 rank out of 179 countries ranked in 2008
of the UN Human Development Index that measures human
welfare world-wide. The Chinery Hesse report atrociously
recommends six cars, two houses, US$1 million seed money
for a foundation and a chunk of over US$400,000.
Sounding unGhanaian in the face of dire economic
situation, the CJA sees the package as “rape” of Ghana’s
coffers from purportedly out-of-touch politicians and
bureaucrats who appear unaware that in the authentic
Ghanaian reality most people live on US$2.00 a day, some
less so.
No doubt, the CJA, which actions aren’t new, but its
increasing non-partisanship is, has to raise awareness
and voice concern about important economic, social and
political issues. The CJA is yet to take on an
enlightenment garb and battle the inhibiting aspects of
the Ghanaian culture as part of its progress mission.
From pre-independence struggles to the on-going
17-year-old democracy, the power of protest, against
certain perceived national wrongs or poor thinking, has
been part of the cornerstones of Ghana’s progress as
protesters shake the status quo a bit for it to come to
its senses.
Aside from other national/regional institutions, the
CJA’s power of protest is an indication of Ghana’s
progress barometer – for a moment just forget the UN,
EU, Freedom House, ECOWAS, bla, bla, bla and other
development measuring agencies and watch the CJA’s
activities in relation to Ghana’s progress. Each regime
has its measuring meter – now we have the
Atta-Mills-meter, against which Ghanaians would measure
how President John Atta-Mills and his National
Democratic Congress (NDC) are doing – more protest means
Atta-Mills isn’t thinking well and have to be boxed in
to reason fine in the face of contemporary realities.
For now, the new Atta-Mills regime appears to have
received mild punches from the CJA. The CJA has sounded
that as per the national situation it will respond
appropriately to Atta-Mills. Protests can be either mild
or strong, depending on the circumstances – the more
gratuitous governments are, as was the case under Kwame
Nkrumah’s draconian one-party regime, Kutu Acheampong’s
near-imposition of his juju-marabou-necromancer dictated
Union Government against all realities, and the Jerry
Rawlings military juntas that eventually resulted in a
“culture of silence,” the stronger the protests.
Regimes may respond bizarrely to the protests but in the
long run the protesters come out as the winners since
they are more on the side of reality. As per protesting
Acheampong was overthrown and killed, Nkrumah was
overthrown and exiled, and Rawlings was supremely forced
to democratize.
Protests aren’t only to check governmental excesses,
foolhardiness and disconnections from reality but also
let governments think well and put them in proper
position. It knocks some sense into governments’
gobbledygook. It doesn’t matter whether civilian or
military governments, the power of protest is part of
the arteries running within the Ghanaian development and
democracy processes.
Controversial pundits Kwasi Pratt Jr. and Kweku Baako
are nationally known protesters who attempts to unblock
the dirt that have blocked the development blood
vessels. No doubt they have won national and
international awards for being part of the national
conscience and Ghana’s democratic growth. Pratt Jr., the
managing editor of the Accra-based Insight, had
consistently taken on official corruption and has called
for enquiry into allegations of bribery pinned against
some former government officials such as former couple
Rawlings and his blustering wife Nana Konadu Agyemang,
who ruled Ghana for almost 20 years with shaky
accountability, transparency and muzzled freedoms.
And just as departing President John Kufuor ordered for
the discontinuation of corruption case involving Nana
Konadu and five others for allegedly “willfully causing
financial loss to the State” in relation to the
divestiture of the GIHOC Cannery at Nsawam, Kweku Baako,
who thinks Nana Konadu doesn’t know what conflict of
interest is as a first lady when she bought the GIHOC
Cannery with her friends, served notice that he will
continue with the issue by proceeding to the Commission
for Human Rights and Administrative Justice for it to
“probe the issue further to ascertain the truth.”
As citizens of a democratic country, Baako, Pratt Jr and
their CJA folks have the greater freedom of speech and
assembly for their protest activities against less
freedoms in the years of military juntas and one-party
systems. At the African level, Baako, Pratt Jr and their
CJA family have a duty to the rights Ghanaians enjoy to
the deprivation of such freedoms in other African
countries.
But democracy or not, the power of protest is embedded
in African traditions. As Maxwell Owusu, of the
University of Michigan, explains in “Rebellion,
Revolution, and Tradition: Reinterpreting Coups in
Ghana,” traditional institutions such as the militant
Asafo organizations overthrow traditional rulers,
through passionate protest, who have violated
traditional governance values such as “not being
accountable to the people.”
Now-and-then the protest arteries are blocked that need
to be cleaned, and now-and-then they are unblocked as
the Ghanaian system naturally swings for equilibrium
through the power of protest as, more than ever, the
on-going democracy opens spaces for the rule of law and
greater freedoms. With the fast developing mass media,
the sleepy intellectuals awakening, developmental
confidence increasing, and national consciousness
rising, protest as a democratic tool is on the upswing,
taking on diverse national issues and making governments
retreat now-and-then as realities are thrown on their
face.
The power of protest normally wheel around some
individuals who have greater conscience, are highly
public spirited and altruistic, are bold and daring, and
are able to speak their minds freely without fear,
despite sometimes the dangers involved. Kwame Nkrumah is
widely known for protesting against the tyrannical
British colonial regime and Nana Akufo-Addo, Baako, and
Pratt Jr. against dreadful military juntas.
Either through Baako, Pratt Jr. or Akufo-Addo, short of
broader public intellectual culture to take on pressing
national issues consistently and put governments and
national institutions on their feet, the CJA is
increasingly assuming the clout as a medium for public
intellectual thought and activity, a public conscience
that perpetually attempts to push governments to think
holistically, shakes parts of the system that are
sleeping, and make the voice of the voiceless heard on
national level in a culture with its high traditional
paternalistic and gerontological tradition that either
suppresses most Ghanaians’ voices or make Ghanaians
afraid to speak their minds.
While over the years some national protest have been
partisan, protests are increasingly becoming centrist or
contrarian, depending on which of the political spectrum
one is – shifting from one issue to another and back to
the original issue. It doesn’t matter the political
orientation of the key protesters, as democracy develops
and developmental concerns become objective national
issues the power of protests will help further develop
democracy and freedoms.
It is in such atmosphere that the CJA will be judged,
especially in taking on the traditionally entrenched and
powerful status quo, and helping to further open up and
organize government thinking.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Canada, February 7, 2009
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