Accra, Sept. 28, Ghanadot/GNA- Mr. Alabira
Ibrahim, former Special Assistant to the late
Kwadwo Baah-Wiredu, Minister of Finance and
Economic Planning, on Sunday extolled him as a
very diligent and honest man who did not condone
corruption.
He stressed: “I believe that Kwadwo Baah never
condoned corruption even if it meant dealing
with cases on the quiet… I knew of instances
while I worked with him at the Ministry of Local
Government and Rural Development, when he said
no-thank-you to people and ordered the return of
gifts to senders.”
Mr. Ibrahim, Former Convention Peoples Party (CPP)
Member of Parliament (MP), for Mion, said his
intrinsic worth might have endeared President
John Agyekum Kufuor to name him as his first
Cabinet Minister.
In a tribute made available to the Ghana News
Agency, he said: “To say that Kwadwo Baah was
very hard working will be an under statement.
Whatever he did, he did with all his might and
with all his heart. He was meticulous with the
examination of documents however voluminous.
“I came to know Kwadwo Baah-Wiredu as a
colleague in the second Parliament of the Fourth
Republic (1997-2000). When I lost my seat in the
2000 elections, he invited me to join him at the
Ministry of Local Government where I worked as
his Special Assistant for about 18 months.”
He said as MP he worked closely with him,
especially on the Public Accounts Committee of
which he was the Vice Chairman.
Mr. Ibrahim said he often chaired the committee
sittings because the then Chairman Mr J.H Mensah,
was busy performing other duties as Minority
Leader.
“Mr Baah-Wiredu attended every scheduled
committee meeting and when attendance was low,
he could always count on me too to be present
and so we became close.”
The former MP
said Mr. Baah-Wiredu was a workaholic who came
to work early and left the office late,
sometimes after 2000 hours, when he had cleared
his desk.
“He insisted on hard work and would call on
officers to discuss their work, give people
tasks or listen to reports; he would go round
peeping into offices and greeting workers. To
the surprise of many, I sometimes accompanied
him to the workers canteen downstairs to eat
lunch.
“In his Parliamentary duties, his favourite was
the yearly Financial Statement (Budget) sent to
Parliament for debate and approval. In those
days, Kwadwo Baah would scrutinize the Budget
Statement from cover to cover and make copious
notes on every page. In later years, when I
visited him at the Finance Ministry, I heard him
insisting that his secretary should send an
advance copy of the Budget to Dr Nii Moi Thomsom
of the CPP whose views he respected and
cherished.”
Mr. Ibrahim said Mr. Baah-Wiredu was a very
humble and down to earth person who dressed
simply and preferred to wear a tie only for the
Chamber of Parliament or for formal occasions.
He noted that, the late Minister did not create
an atmosphere of self-importance around him and
was always smiling, not insulting or being saucy
even when he was heckled on the floor of
Parliament.
“One got a sense of how frugal this man was when
you visited his house, you would see that,
humility permeated the whole household from his
wife to his daughters.
“Initially, at the Local Government Ministry, he
insisted on using just a small saloon car while
in Accra and did so till I left. He preferred
using such smaller cars rather than being
wasteful in a 4x4 vehicle just to run round
Accra.”
Mr Ibrahim said he was courteous and respected
everyone he encountered, listening to their
problems whether official and personal.
“He answered every phone call with a sincere
"yes sir" or "senior" without knowing who might
be at the other end. His office door was always
open to all and when the queue in his reception
was long, he would occasionally pop out to
assure the visitors waiting to see him of
audience.
“One weekend in 2002, there was a knock on the
front door of my flat which was answered by my
daughter. And to her utter surprise Mr
Baah-Wiredu was at the door. He had come to
discuss a draft document on decentralisation
that I was working on, and which he was to
present at a Mini-Consultative Group meeting
with the International Monetary Fund the
following Monday. When he left my daughter
wondered why he had not called me, but rather
chose to come to a subordinate to discuss work!”
Mr Ibrahim described Mr Baah-Wiredu as a very
well-organised person who kept a daily record of
activities that occurred in diaries, many
volumes of which he was sure he filled up during
nearly eight years as Cabinet Minister, and the
last volume of which would have been with him
till he passed away in South Africa.
“I like to end by paraphrasing the words of an
old song which goes: Has anybody here seen my
friend Kwadwo Baah? Can you tell Ghanaians where
he is gone? He worked so hard for Ghana. But it
seems the good die young. Ghanaians just looked
around and he was gone.
“Kwadwo Baah loved to serve mother Ghana and did
it wholeheartedly thus giving meaning to the
word “Patriotism. He was a true Patriot.”
GNA