|
UK secret doubts at Ghana freedom
By Rick Fountain
BBC News , October 3, 2008
British cabinet papers, kept secret until now,
reveal the deep pessimism felt by ministers over the
future of Ghana as an independent state.
According to the 1950s' documents, doubts were
expressed about whether the country could be viable
state.
One politician said Ghanaians had every
qualification for democratic government as they
appeared to be "incompetent, cruel, divided and
corrupt".
Ghana was the UK's first African colony to win
independence.
Back in the 1950s, the UK was feeling the heat from
calls to set free its African territories and
ministers were in a hurry to do something about it.
But even though the Gold Coast, as it then was, had
been promised independence, ministers doubted that
that Ghana would be a democratic and viable unitary
state.
These people appear to be incompetent, cruel,
divided and corrupt
Harold MacMillan, then UK chancellor
Experts reported problems of corruption and
hostility between the three main communities -
Muslims in the north, tribal African communities in
the interior and then the peoples of the better-off
coastal strip.
Ministers told the Colonial Secretary, Alan Lennox
Boyd, that Ghana should instead be a federation. He
said it was too late for that.
Then, Harold Macmillan, the chancellor, startled the
Cabinet by declaring harshly that "these people", as
he put it, seemed to have "every qualification for
democratic government".
"They appear to be incompetent, cruel, divided and
corrupt" he said.
He wished them "a happy future".
Those sarcastic and bitter words stand in stark
contrast to another, more generous Macmillan speech
a few years later, as a UK prime minister in
apartheid South Africa:
"The wind of change is blowing through this
continent, whether we like it or not, the growth of
national consciousness is a political fact, we must
all accept it as a fact and our national policies
must take account of it."
|