Friday 27 March 2015

Democracy is not the Panacea for Development: My Tribute to Lee Kuan Yew



As I was surfing through the web, I chanced on a news item breaking  the news on the death of Singapore’s founding father, Lee Kuan Yew but instead of soaking tears for this man as custom demanded when someone joined the ancestral world, I rather felt proud for this true hero and I could hear myself whispering that “bravo! we are proud of you”.

I suddenly dismissed the renowned academic, Charles Abugre’s suggestion that, “Dead politicians are different things to different people and that, their good is usurped, their failures exhumed and magnified as appropriate and in accordance with creed.” This certainly cannot be the case with Lee Kuan Yew.

The death of Lee Kuan Yew shook the foundation of the world and the media as usual, begun to trumpet what he stood for.  Tributes begun to pour from around the globe, eulogizing this national hero who transformed Singapore from a small port city into a wealthy global hub. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he was "deeply saddened" by Mr Lee's death. US President Barack Obama described him as a "giant of history". The Chinese foreign ministry called him "a uniquely influential statesman in Asia".

But the big question is, why would the world celebrate a man whose leadership was criticised for his iron grip on power??  A man who was criticized for his uncompromising stance against democracy and stifled press freedom?

Even after he could not effectively perform his mandate due to old age, he relinquished his position to his son, now Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. And so the multi-million question still remains that what was so special about the legacy of a man whose political ideologies were perceived as the exact opposite of the people who are now singing his praises?

Singapore is one of the world neatest countries and even citizens cannot even chew gum in public yet a showpiece of rapid economic transformation.

Kwame Nkrumah’s Ama Ghana was in the same development plane with the likes of Malaysia and Singapore after independence, but today, Ghana’s has nothing to show except the empty self-fulfilling clique that “Ghana is the gateway to Africa and a beacon of democracy”.

Having organised six successful elections since 1992 and received accolades from the international community, Ghana pride herself in Africa as a beacon of peace and democracy.

Interestingly, democracy has often been tagged as the first crack of the seemingly impregnable wall of industrialization and development, but is democracy really the trick to development?

Ghana’s self-imposed tag as the “gateway to Africa and a democratic cockpit,” to borrow words from Chinua Achebe, is no more than the power of a child over a goat that was said to be his. As long as the goat was alive it could be his; he would find it food and take care of it. But the day it was slaughtered he would know soon enough who the real owner was.

Ghana still wallows in so many myriad of economic challenges including the infamous dumsor which has compelled some people think that Ghana would have been better off if the country was still under colonialism.

I have always had my reservation about this thing called “democracy”. In my opinion, African countries needed selfless long-serving dictators like Lee Kuan Yew in order to accelerate the wheels of development

Libya under Gadhafi witnessed, massive infrastructural development especially his housing policy which ensured that even children who were yet to be born in ten years’ time had housing facilities.

During the 1950’s under the leadership of King Idris, Libya was among the poorest nations in the world with some of the lowest living standards. From the early 1980’s until 2003 Libya were placed under heavy sanctions by the US and UN which had the result of strangling Libya’s growing economy leading to an inevitable smothering of development projects and social welfare schemes.

Despite this the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya headed by Muammar Gaddafi achieved the highest living standard in Africa. Libya also invested heavily in African development initiatives. The funding of infrastructure projects as well as African political and financial institutions was aimed at developing
Africa independently, and combating the economic exploitation of African resources and labour by outside powers.

Gadhafi had transformed a desert-proned country into one of the richest country in Africa where until the ousting of Gadhafi, Libya became the US for many young people in other Africa countries notably, Ghana and Nigeria, who sought to better their lives by seeking greener pastures there.

The number of people who perished their lives on the Sahara desert in their quest to travel to Libya to seek for greener pastures would beat human imagination, yet the west and their cohorts ostensibly found everything wrong with this man on the bases of their so-called human rights and democracy.

The irony however is that this was the same people who perpetuated slave trade in Africa and used dozens of our grandparents as mouthwatering feast to whales and fishes in the Atlantic Ocean, but today, they want to force their so-called democracy and human rights down our throat as the panacea to our woes.

Meanwhile Ama Ghana is malnourished and is inching closer to her graveyard owing to wounds inflicted on her by corrupt officials ranging from the passengers to the bus driver, yet we continue to hammer and take pride in this so-democracy. What is the meaning of democracy to a hungry man?

Ama Ghana is rich in talents, human and natural resources but her children have now formed what is called “Graduate Unemployment Association,” her inflation figures are sky-rocketing, her children are dying from simple preventive disease such as cholera, interest rate is ballooning and to cap it all, her children are now begging for pittance from a so-called IMF.

Listening to the Joy FM’s annual debate on Thursday, March, 26, on the motion “Ghana’s independence had lost its meaning”, Dr. Richard Amoako Baah, who debated for the motion made a profound statement that Ghana needed to change her game if she wanted to win, and to him, Ghana’s independence has lost its meaning.

His co-debater, Prof. Agyemang Badu Akorsah, however, insisted that the likes of Singapore and Malaysia had developed because the west allowed them to use their brains since they had no natural resources.

But my interest in the debate stemmed from a statement by Dr. Amoako Baah that people by nature are bad, and therefore strict policing must be put in place to check behaviors.

This statement, in my view, is an area Ghana and Africa leaders have failed. African leaders themselves are corrupt and therefore they pay lip-services in the fight against corruption. They form create, loot and share governments and therefore they have lax their effort in the fight against corruption.

The symptoms of this beast called “corruption” is staring us on the face in all facets of our national lives but what do we see? Several people were indicted for various corrupt practices ranging from the Wayome unlawful judgment debt payment, the GYEEDA scandal and the rest, but interestingly,the institutions that are supposed to punish these people are reacting with “kid blows”.

According to the Forbes.com, the family fortune of Hosni Mubarak of Egypt was $70 billion. In the same vein, the net worth of General Ibrahim Babangida, a former military dictator of Nigeria, was $12 billion whilst that of Omar al-Bashir of Sudan was $9 billion.

Accordingly, it also computes that the personal fortune of General Sani Abacha, former military dictator of Nigeria, was $5 billion, whilst the net worth of Charles Taylor of Liberia was $5 billion.
The personal fortune of Mobutu Sese Seko of Congo, Forbes says, was $5 billion.

The personal fortune of Daniel Arap Moi of Kenya, according to forbes.com, was $3 billion whilst the net worth of Isabel dos Santos, daughter of Angola’s President, stood at $3.1 billion

Meanwhile, Forbes.com further revealed that, for a perspective, the total or combined net worth of all 43 US presidents-from Washington to Obama- was only $2.7 billion. (See http://theatln.tc/1uZ8wMD)

Ghana and by extension Africa still commanded enormous wealth, talents and human resources but corruption is impoverishing the continent and therefore it is a high time Africans stopped blaming colonial imperialists for their backwardness.

The hard truth however is that, the west is as guilty of corrupt practices as the African leaders because the west have provided safe haven where African leaders comfortably save their booties from their corrupt deals. The only difference between corrupt leaders in the west and that of Africa is that when a politician in the West engaged in corrupt practices, the “booty” was invested in the same country and therefore the money stayed in the country but the contrary could be said of the African corrupt leader.

To put it mildly, Africa leaders have failed because they have refused to play the kpa kpa kpa game.

Writer: Abdul-Karim Mohammed Awaf
Communication Studies
University of Cape Coast.



Thursday 26 March 2015

Poultry farmers want subsidies on feed

The Vice-President of the Ghana National Association of Poultry Farmers, Mr Tony Mensah, has appealed to the government to subsidise the cost of poultry feed in order to help farmers increase the production of birds in the country to meet the growing local demand.

He also noted that such a move would empower local poultry farmers to be able to produce sufficient birds to compete effectively with imported poultry on pricing.

 “Almost 70 per cent of production cost is on feed and this is where we want the government to come in.  Now there is no subsidy on poultry as it was in the 1980s,” Mr Mensah told the Daily Graphic in an interview last Wednesday.

“Soya, maize and fish meal are the main ingredients of poultry feed but these are very expensive and that is where the challenge is,” he added.
Need for capacity building

While commending the government for being proactive in its efforts to resuscitate the industry by bringing on board the ‘Ghana Broiler Revitalisation Project (GHABROP),’ Mr Mensah said there was also the need to rebuild the capacities of poultry farmers in the country to be abreast of modern ways of farming to increase productivity.

 “You can have good feed; you can have good birds yet management will be a problem, so the government can also help in developing the capacity of poultry farmers to be able to manage production,” he appealed.

On earlier requests for the government to consider compelling hotels to use only locally-grown chicken in their operations, Mr Mensah said the government must first improve the production capacity of local farmers to be able to meet local demand before such a policy could be implemented.
Poultry advisory council

Mr Mensah also called on the Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MoFA) to expedite action on the setting up of the poultry advisory council.

 “The council is expected to oversee the operations of the industry and a document on its establishment was currently with Cabinet for approval,” Mr Mensah said.

The document when approved by Cabinet, he said, would oversee the welfare of the local poultry industry and also help build the capacity of players.

On the impact of recent investments in the poultry industry, Mr Mensah said Ghanaians should expect increased output this year to meet a greater part of demand.

He, however, urged all Ghanaians to repose confidence in the local poultry industry and opt for local chicken as against  imported ones.

Ghana’s competitiveness

There is currently a debate as to whether or not the country has the competitive advantage to do poultry on a large scale to meet local demand and for export.

The Managing Director of the Ghana Netherlands Chamber of Commerce (GHANECC), Mr Nico Van Staalduinen, who stirred the controversy when he suggested to the government not to concentrate on poultry production because Ghana lacked the competitive advantage in the sector, has come under intense fire from all walks of life.

According to him, the conditions in Ghana did not favour poultry production and urged the government to focus on areas such as rice production, among other things, where it had the competitive advantage.

Making a contribution during the Graphic Business/Fidelity Bank Breakfast Meeting in Accra, he categorically called on the government to stop investing in the production of poultry, and explained that the high temperatures in the country, high cost of poultry feed and frequent outbreak of bird flu made it uncompetitive for the country to undertake commercial rearing of the birds.

But his assertion has been vehemently opposed by various people, including players in the local poultry industry.

They cited the early 80s and 90s when Ghana had many poultry farmers who produced on a large scale to meet local demand and for exports as an example that could be repeated provided the government provided a better playing field for the farmers in the business

- See more at: http://graphic.com.gh/business/business-news/28021-poultry-farmers-want-subsidies-on-feed.html#sthash.R1Y0WFfp.dpuf

Don’t Produce Poultry in Ghana — CEO of Netherlands Chamber tirs Debate

The Managing Director of the Ghana-Netherlands Chamber of Commerce (GHANECC), Mr Nico Van Staalduinen, last week stirred controversy when he suggested to the government not to concentrate on poultry production because Ghana lacked the competitive advantage in sector.

According to him, the conditions in Ghana do not favour poultry production and urged the government to focus on areas such as rice production, among other things, where it had the competitive advantage.

Making a contribution during the GRAPHIC BUSINESS/FIDELITY BANK Breakfast Meeting in Accra on June 15, he categorically called on the government to stop investing in the production of poultry, and explained that the high temperatures in the country, high cost of poultry feed and frequent outbreak of bird flu made it uncompetitive for the country to undertake commercial rearing of the birds.

But his assertion was vehemently opposed by a renowned film producer, Mr Kow Ansah, who wondered whether Mr Staalduinen had conducted any studies to arrive at his conclusion.

He cited the early 80s and 90s when Ghana had many poultry farmers who produced on a large scale to meet local demand for exports.

“We have done it before and we can still do it; We do not need you to come tell us what we are competitive in or not; the examples of Darko Farms and Afariwa farms are there to show”, he argued fiercely to an extent that the moderator for the function had to step in to calm tempers.

His call comes at a time when the government is preparing a GHC50 million package to revive the ailing poultry industry.

The funding is expected to resuscitate dying companies, start new businesses,as well as set up small scale processing plants to process the birds for the local market.

The venture is expected to help reduce the country’s over-dependence on imported poultry, which is currently costing government some US$350 million annually.
The outgoing Minister of Trade and Industry, Mr Haruna Iddrisu, had met with the members of the poultry association to assure them of the government’s support to restore the fortunes of the poultry sector.

Giants in the industry such as Afariwa Farms and Darko Farms, which combined with many others, supplied to meet local demand and for exports, have both collapsed, leaving a few in operation.
Arguing further in favour of his position in an interview with the GRAPHIC BUSINESS, Mr Staalduinen insisted that instead of channelling money into a venture that might yield no results, he said the country was better off using that money to support sectors that it had competitive advantage.

“Technically, Ghana can produce chicken but Ghana can ever hardly be competitive in the growth of chicken because the varieties of chickens that are preferred at the global market today are not favourable in Ghana because of the weather. Unless Ghana considers starting from the scratch to develop a good variety of chicken that will do well in Ghana, it will be uncompetitive to engage in commercial poultry production” he explained.

While admitting that government’s efforts at reviving the poultry industry was also supported by the Netherlands government, the CEO of the GHANECC said it did not take out the fact that Ghana’s present circumstances made it uncompetitive in the commercial poultry business.

Mr Staalduinen held the view that chickens that were reared in temperatures above 28 Degree Celsius got drenched quickly because of the high temperature.

That, he said, meant that places such as Europe, where temperatures are milder, if five or 10 day old chickens would die in a day, 60 or 100 day old chickens would die in Ghana in a day because of the high temperature.

Having worked in the poultry industry in Netherlands before coming to Ghana, Mr Staalduinen explained that “a chicken that takes 40 days in Europe to gain slaughter weight will take not less than 60 days in Ghana to gain weight because chickens in Ghana drink a lot of water.”

Feeding challenges

He said Ghana was not able to produce enough maize for human consumption and would, therefore, be forced to import some to feed poultry should it go into commercial production.
This argument is on the back of the fact that Ghana is still not self-sufficient in maize production and has to rely on imports to make up for local demand.

Using his own country as an example, Mr Staalduinen said Netherlands could not compete favourably with Ghana in cassava production because his country did not have the right temperature needed for cassava to thrive and hence the need for Ghana to take advantage of its location and rather invest in cassava, tilapia, oil palm, maize and other areas where it had competitive advantage.

He pointed out that the Ghana poultry industry did well in the past because it was difficult to export poultry to Ghana because of factors such as high duty chargers but the situation was not the same at the moment and, therefore, Ghana should look carefully for its strong points where it had the advantage.

Poultry Association reacts

The Ghana National Association of Poultry Farmers has disagreed with suggestions that the country is not competitive in poultry production, hence the need for government to channel its resources in other sectors.

According to the association, the local poultry industry was producing its 40 per cent production quota currently, and with more government interventions, it could up its capacity.
Poultry association reacts

In a related development, the Chairman of the Poultry Farmers Association of Ghana, Mr Kwadwo Asante, has described the suggestions made by the Managing Director of the Ghana Netherlands Chamber of Commerce (GHANECC), Mr Staalduinen, as baseless.

He told the GRAPHIC BUSINESS on July 18 that “The government intervention is creating more market for us. Since government does not want to ban poultry importation outright, gradually we are going to take up full production quota at 100 per cent,” he explained.

According to him, birds being raised from the Akati and Darko Farms were surviving in the same conditions that Mr Van Staalduinen cited as unconducive for the country and subsequently belaboured the assertion that Ghana would be uncompetitive in poultry production.

Daily Graphic, July, 22, 2014

Don’t produce poultry in Ghana — CEO of Netherlands Chamber stirs debate - See more at: http://graphic.com.gh/business/business-news/27547-don-t-produce-poultry-in-ghana-ceo-of-netherlands-chamber-stirs-debate.html#sthash.ZAuqku18.OKKtfk8P.dpuf

The Managing Director of the Ghana-Netherlands Chamber of Commerce (GHANECC), Mr Nico Van Staalduinen, last week stirred controversy when he suggested to the government not to concentrate on poultry production because Ghana lacked the competitive advantage in sector.
According to him, the conditions in Ghana do not favour poultry production and urged the government to focus on areas such as rice production, among other things, where it had the competitive advantage.
Making a contribution during the GRAPHIC BUSINESS/FIDELITY BANK Breakfast Meeting in Accra on June 15, he categorically called on the government to stop investing in the production of poultry, and explained that the high temperatures in the country, high cost of poultry feed and frequent outbreak of bird flu made it uncompetitive for the country to undertake commercial rearing of the birds.
But his assertion was vehemently opposed by a renowned film producer, Mr Kow Ansah, who wondered whether Mr Staalduinen had conducted any studies to arrive at his conclusion.
He cited the early 80s and 90s when Ghana had many poultry farmers who produced on a large scale to meet local demand for exports.
“We have done it before and we can still do it; We do not need you to come tell us what we are competitive in or not; the examples of Darko Farms and Afariwa farms are there to show”, he argued fiercely to an extent that the moderator for the function had to step in to calm tempers.
His call comes at a time when the government is preparing a GHC50 million package to revive the ailing poultry industry.
The funding is expected to resuscitate dying companies, start new businesses,as well as set up small scale processing plants to process the birds for the local market.
The venture is expected to help reduce the country’s over-dependence on imported poultry, which is currently costing government some US$350 million annually.
The outgoing Minister of Trade and Industry, Mr Haruna Iddrisu, had met with the members of the poultry association to assure them of the government’s support to restore the fortunes of the poultry sector.
Giants in the industry such as Afariwa Farms and Darko Farms, which combined with many others, supplied to meet local demand and for exports, have both collapsed, leaving a few in operation.
Arguing further in favour of his position in an interview with the GRAPHIC BUSINESS, Mr Staalduinen insisted that instead of channelling money into a venture that might yield no results, he said the country was better off using that money to support sectors that it had competitive advantage.
“Technically, Ghana can produce chicken but Ghana can ever hardly be competitive in the growth of chicken because the varieties of chickens that are preferred at the global market today are not favourable in Ghana because of the weather. Unless Ghana considers starting from the scratch to develop a good variety of chicken that will do well in Ghana, it will be uncompetitive to engage in commercial poultry production” he explained.
While admitting that government’s efforts at reviving the poultry industry was also supported by the Netherlands government, the CEO of the GHANECC said it did not take out the fact that Ghana’s present circumstances made it uncompetitive in the commercial poultry business.
Mr Staalduinen held the view that chickens that were reared in temperatures above 28 Degree Celsius got drenched quickly because of the high temperature.
That, he said, meant that places such as Europe, where temperatures are milder, if five or 10 day old chickens would die in a day, 60 or 100 day old chickens would die in Ghana in a day because of the high temperature.
Having worked in the poultry industry in Netherlands before coming to Ghana, Mr Staalduinen explained that “a chicken that takes 40 days in Europe to gain slaughter weight will take not less than 60 days in Ghana to gain weight because chickens in Ghana drink a lot of water.”
Feeding challenges
He said Ghana was not able to produce enough maize for human consumption and would, therefore, be forced to import some to feed poultry should it go into commercial production.
This argument is on the back of the fact that Ghana is still not self-sufficient in maize production and has to rely on imports to make up for local demand.
Using his own country as an example, Mr Staalduinen said Netherlands could not compete favourably with Ghana in cassava production because his country did not have the right temperature needed for cassava to thrive and hence the need for Ghana to take advantage of its location and rather invest in cassava, tilapia, oil palm, maize and other areas where it had competitive advantage.
He pointed out that the Ghana poultry industry did well in the past because it was difficult to export poultry to Ghana because of factors such as high duty chargers but the situation was not the same at the moment and, therefore, Ghana should look carefully for its strong points where it had the advantage.
Poultry Association reacts
The Ghana National Association of Poultry Farmers has disagreed with suggestions that the country is not competitive in poultry production, hence the need for government to channel its resources in other sectors.
According to the association, the local poultry industry was producing its 40 per cent production quota currently, and with more government interventions, it could up its capacity.
Poultry association reacts
In a related development, the Chairman of the Poultry Farmers Association of Ghana, Mr Kwadwo Asante, has described the suggestions made by the Managing Director of the Ghana Netherlands Chamber of Commerce (GHANECC), Mr Staalduinen, as baseless.
He told the GRAPHIC BUSINESS on July 18 that “The government intervention is creating more market for us. Since government does not want to ban poultry importation outright, gradually we are going to take up full production quota at 100 per cent,” he explained.
According to him, birds being raised from the Akati and Darko Farms were surviving in the same conditions that Mr Van Staalduinen cited as unconducive for the country and subsequently belaboured the assertion that Ghana would be uncompetitive in poultry production.
- See more at: http://graphic.com.gh/business/business-news/27547-don-t-produce-poultry-in-ghana-ceo-of-netherlands-chamber-stirs-debate.html#sthash.ZAuqku18.OKKtfk8P.dpuf

Sunday 22 March 2015

The Institutionalization of Corruption: The Twin Sister of Ebola


The scare of Ebola in the sub-region of West-Africa renewed a wave of debate which opened the public space where perceptions, opinions and expert advices were molded into a global discourse.

We congratulate our gallant men and women who volunteered and went to these Ebola-infected countries and are back with us. Bravo!

To many people, the outbreak of Ebola was the worst disease to strike mankind since the time of Adam. The World Bank estimated that the disease would cost the already poverty-ravaged sub-region $80M, unless concerted efforts were taken to stop the spread of the disease. Everybody within the sub-region was subjected to some form of fear, anxiety and harrowing experiences. To some, the Ebola disease was synonymous to the biblical pestilence and therefore sought refuge in the “Old Man” above. Others had a contrary view, to them, the African gods were angry and needed to be pacified.

And as very typical of Africans, some people did not hesitate to exploit the humor side of the whole episode. Several satirical videos became popular on social media, with some clips racking up hundreds of thousands of viewers. This stirred a sort of happy experiences despite deepening the fears of the already fear-gripped African.

At an individual level, the Ebola scare expanded my vocabulary wardrobe, for the words, “epidemic” and “pandemic” had ringed in my ears several times, but I had not bothered to find out the difference between these seemly similar words. But thanks to the Ebola outbreak, it dawned on me that after all, the two words could be said to be “cousins” but certainly not “twin sisters” who spilled from the same ovary.

In the midst of this mounting fear and anxiety, the Ebola scare became the “hook” for major local and international media houses, but surprisingly, I laughed it off each time I saw any bulletin that contained Ebola-related story. In my opinion, the world and its people were hypocrites.

Some held the school of thought that Ebola was a population control weapon manufactured in the lab by the West that was intended to reduce the population of Africa. To them, the West feared the arithmetic growth in population of Africa threatened their survival. But that was not my beef, my “mutton” was that the African suffered a more deadly disease far dangerous than Ebola. A disease which had been allowed to thrive for decades but has only received ‘kid blows’ in its combat. In my view, that disease was synonymous to the proverbial snake, very coldly and shiny, but deadly when it stroke. The worst disease of our time, in my opinion, was not the much advertised Ebola, but the institutionalization of corruption.

According to the Transparency Intentional, an anti-corruption body’s report 2013, corruption cost Africa more than $80billion a year, far more than the $30billion African countries received annually as grants from the West.

The symptoms of this canker is staring us on the face in all facets of our national lives.

I walked into one public office in 2010 and I still remember every episode I witnessed as vividly as the day a decent woman breaks her virginity. The woman in the office, apparently, the secretary to the “big man” I was going to look for, gave me scornful look and told me straight in the face that the man was not there. Meanwhile I had spotted the man’s car parked in the compound, so I suspected the woman might be lying to me. After the back and forth argument, I decided to wait for a while. All of a sudden, a man walked into the office and this woman told him the same story but the man dipped into his pocket and dropped 5 cedis note on her table. To my surprise, the woman wobbled into an adjoining office, came back in a jiffy and told the man to see her boss. You see! People now demand to be bribed before they execute the services they are hired to render, for which they are paid.

The CDD report released on December, 2, 2014 indicted several institutions in Ghana of corrupt practices including “sacred” institutions such as the Judiciary and the Office of the Presidency. The Police Institution as expected fell on the number three position. This was not surprising since the Police Service have institutionalized the “mandatory one Ghana cedis road tax” that trotro drivers must pay to them each time the police mounted a barricade on the road.

Corruption from the word go, has been attached to the umbilical cord of the African. The Africa traditional systems in itself reinforce corrupt practices. This might sound very impolite and harsh, but that is the bitter truth. There have been several reported cases of traditional leaders selling lands to multiple buyers. Besides that, traditionally, a person who visited the Chief's Palace was expected to go there wrapped with a gift.

Former President Jerry John Rawlings ignited a controversy when he described some men of God as charlatans who were using magic to deceive some naïve Ghanaians. Some people called for his head for touching God’s anointed children, but the activities of some men of God seem to give currency to his statement.

It is evident that some men of God are turning into millionaires at the expense of their congregation who continue to wallow in perpetual poverty.

Inasmuch as religion is the soul of every society and by extension country, it is high time the behaviors of some so-called men of God are fine-tuned to reflect the very gospel they preached about. Religion has the core mandate to transform lives of the marginalized and the socially-handicapped by bestowing hope, understanding and drawing people closer to their maker, but contrary, we have wittingly or unwittingly raised some men of God above sainthood, making it blasphemous to criticize them even when they crossed the line.

Even in our political front, competency has been thrown to the dogs. All that a person who wants to occupy a political office needs to do is to bribe his or her way through. Ironically, if you demand that someone must give you money before you vote for him or her, then do you have the moral right to criticize the person if he or she fails to deliver on his or her mandate?

I contested for the position of Local NUGS Secretary in the University of Cape Coast some time ago but I lost it, not because my competitor who finally won was competent more than I was, or possibly, because I did not adopt a proper campaign strategy, the only wall that separated me from achieving my goal was that I was unyielding to tow the status quo. Every person I approached demanded I gave them money because, according to them, every person seeking leadership position was only going there to loot.

All the influential traditional leaders in all the halls of residence I approached demanded not less than 500 cedis before they would rally their support behind me. If you multiple that amount of money by the six traditional halls, then your guess would be as good as mine. This was beside the “hausa koko”, “shawani” and yoghurt I was supposed to share to “buy students’ vote” in addition to printing of posters. So if I spend more than 5,000 cedis just to occupy a position of Local NUGS Secretary, would you begrudge me when I become corrupt?

This might sound like a fairy tale but the reality is that many of our national politicians go through similar, if not worse ordeals in their quest to occupy political offices. We should not always think of corruption in terms of political leadership. We must realize that our individual actions or inactions are contributory factors that continue to nourish this beast called corruption.

Today we have all joined the bandwagon to protest against Woyome unlawful judgement debt payment, the GYEEDA scandal, NSS rot, Police recruitment scam and the rest. That is an awesome showcase of patriotism, but at the individual level, are we upholding integrity in our daily activities? Do we pay lip service to its combat?

If the world could contribute billions of dollars to combat Ebola virus, what prevent us from pulling our resource to fight a more deadly disease like corruption which is tearing our continent apart? Africa certainly needs a conscious revolution that would awaken us from our deepest slumber.

Writer: Abdul-Karim Mohammed Awaf
Communication Studies
University of Cape Coast