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PRESS RELEASE
Wednesday, December 15, 2010

AKUFO-ADDO’S MESSAGE TO HIS EXCELLENCY JOHN AGYEKUM KUFUOR ON THE OCCASION OF HIS 72ND BIRTHDAY AND IN COMMEMORATION OF THE 10TH ANNIVERSARY OF HIS HISTORIC VICTORY OF 2000

Good evening and a hearty welcome to all of you here.
I invited you so that together, we could celebrate the 72nd birthday of our outstanding leader, John Agyekum Kufuor, and also commemorate the 10th anniversary of his historic victory in the presidential election of 2000, which saw the first peaceful transfer of power from one party to another in our turbulent history. I chose this day sometime ago for this event. But, as Providence would have it, earlier today, Ghana joined the league of oil producing nations across the world. After over a century of search, we discovered oil in commercial quantities, in 2007. It took a careful and determined effort on the part of the NPP government, led by President John Agyekum Kufuor, together with all the Jubilee partners, for this feat to be achieved. Like many others, who know how far our nation has come on that front, and how much you personally put in to ensure this discovery, we say to you your Excellency, ayekoooo!


The discovery of oil in 2007, under your leadership, is one of the myriad of achievements that the NPP government recorded in our eight year rule.


A few days ago, Ghana’s Social Health Insurance Model was recognised by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the World Health Organization (WHO), and singled out for the coveted South-South Cooperation Excellence Award, in Geneva, Switzerland.
A documentary on BBC in 2008 stressed the importance of the School Feeding Programme and the Capitation Grant and the positive impact the two are having on primary school enrolment in Ghana.

In your time, Ghana scored an excellent record of good governance. The separation of powers and the independence of the Judiciary and the Legislature were respected. The media enjoyed unprecedented freedom. The rule of law prevailed and the fundamental human rights of the people were respected. Poverty statistics indicate that in your period, rapid economic progress helped half national poverty rates, which fell from approximately 50 per cent in 1991 to 28.5 per cent by 2006. The GDP of our nation was quadrupled (or grew ten fold per rebasing) in your time. Those who fiercely challenged that fact are today basking in the recent assertion that Ghana has now reached middle income status. The argument as to who is the best president in our history will in due course be settled by the historians. For me, it is enough to say how proud I was and am to have been a member, dare I say it even a senior member, of the most progressive administration in my adult life, an administration that brought to life the concept of development in freedom. I was particularly proud to have been the instrument chosen by your Excellency to facilitate the repeal of the Criminal Libel Law which has led to a radical expansion of media freedom in our country. There are many people today, who, when they see the abuse to which that freedom is being subjected by some irresponsible elements in the media, question the wisdom of the repeal. Even though I am one of the greatest victims of that abuse, I still insist that media freedom is of itself vital for the welfare of the society.


Much as the nation is rejoicing at first oil, there are already disquieting developments on the horizon as to the manner which our oil reserves and revenues are to be treated. The decision by the majority in Parliament to amend its own bill to allow for collateralization of our oil revenue is unfortunate and ill informed. Available evidence from the experience of other oil producing countries suggests that the policy of collaterization of oil revenues became prominent during the booms of the 1970s when oil rich countries, like Angola, Nigeria and Venezuela, excited by the prospects of increased future oil revenues, embarked on heavy borrowing, usually on projects with inflated price tags. The effect was that their economies were tied to their creditors whilst the subsequent servicing of these debts crippled economic transformation. Ghana risks joining this tried and tested cursed path.

I would like to take this opportunity to urge the President of the Republic not to give his assent to the Bill containing the amendment to Clause 5, which removes the agency of restraint on government expenditure embodied in the original Bill, which was approved by his own Cabinet, as it is not in the interest of both current and future generations. To do so would be to go against his own Cabinet’s considered opinion and the expressed wishes of the people of Ghana as were reflected in the view of the over 80% of Ghanaians who contributed to the nationwide consultations on how best to manage and utilize petroleum revenues.


The amendment to Clause 5 opens the possibility for Government to increase the debt burden of the nation to unsustainable levels as witnessed to the detriment of funding frontline social services and workers’ salaries, when such borrowing (even on a far lower scale) resulted in Ghana becoming a Highly Indebted Poor Country. The President who is the first in our history to deal with oil revenues should set a positive precedent of prudent and far-sighted management of these revenues.


Another disturbing development is taking place next door in La Cote d’Ivoire. Our Government, under the leadership of President Kufuor, my predecessor, Hackman Owusu-Agyemang and I as Foreign Ministers, spent a great deal of energy in trying to help put together a peace process for the resolution of the Ivorian crisis. We had all hoped that at long last, long-delayed credible elections would lead finally to the resolution of the crisis. Unfortunately, as a result of lust for power, a disease that seems to afflict so many African leaders, that conclusion is in serious doubt. We can take comfort, however, from the fact that the wave of democracy on the continent continues to gather pace.

 

Our continental organization, the African Union, and our regional body, ECOWAS, are to be both applauded for standing up firmly for the interests of the Ivorian people, who expressed their will so clearly in the November 28 election. Let us hope and pray that the current impasse will be speedily and peacefully overcome, and the freely declared will of the Ivorian people prevail. That is why I want to commend the conduct of my friend, Prime Minister Celou Diallo, who, after due process, has accepted the result of the Guinean presidential election and conceded victory to that great champion of Guinean freedom, Prof Alpha Conde, who deserves all our congratulations for his victory after a life time of struggle for democracy in his country. Celou Diallo has shown he is a patriot and statesman, who is ensuring the unity, peace and stability of his country. You know that l know something of this, having conceded victory in the narrowest presidential election result of our history, perhaps in Africa’s history. The peace, stability, freedom and unity of Ghana take precedence over all other considerations.


In all of this, what can you expect of me, as I strive to fill the large outside shoes of our guest of honour? I want to be a strong, fair minded leader, with deep convictions, a high sense of integrity, who will promote reconciliation and unity in our party and our nation, and encourage the sense of enterprise of the Ghanaian people, one who will deliver on his promises and help create a brighter future for all of us Ghanaians, under conditions of freedom, respect for the liberties of the Ghanaian people and the rule of law. This is the vision of leadership that inspires me, and I am counting on the active cooperation and support of all of you here, and millions beyond, to help make this vision a reality, for the benefit of our nation’s development. In the process, we shall confirm the Danquah-Dombo-Busia tradition in our politics as the greatest force for progress in our nation.


Next year will be a year of intensive preparations for our party as we gear up for the great battle of 2012. We have to win that battle. The welfare of our nation demands it. We dare not contemplate any other outcome.


Let me wish you all a merry Christmas and, if not a prosperous New Year in the conditions of Dufuor’s budget, at least a productive one. Thank you all for honouring my invitation in your numbers. Once again, join me in wishing a happy birthday to His Excellency John Agyekum Kufuor and many more in the years to come, certainly to witness the birth of another NPP administration in 2013, which will build on the solid foundations for progress that were laid in the eight years of his presidency.


Mr. P, God bless and more grease to your elbow.
May God bless all of us and mother Ghana.

 

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MESSAGE TO HIS EXCELLENCY JOHN AGYEKUM KUFUOR ON THE OCCASION OF HIS 72ND BIRTHDAY - AKUFO-ADDO

Press Release, Dec 16, Ghanadot - Good evening and a hearty welcome to all of you here. I invited you so that together, we could celebrate the 72nd birthday of our outstanding leader, John Agyekum Kufuor, and also commemorate the 10th anniversary of his historic victory in the presidential election of 2000.
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