Monday 16 July 2012

Time To Start Planning For A New 5th Republic For Ghana?

Listening to a group of young artisans - made up of carpenters, masons, steel-benders and plumbers,  all below the  age of 30   -   discussing the current state of our nation, was just so revealing.


That the vast majority of ordinary people have become disillusioned with our political class is obvious.


Less obvious,  is their feeling that Ghanaian democracy is a sham designed to provide perfect legal cover,  for a thieving and greedy ruling elite (across the spectrum).


The honest and principled individuals amongst our educated urban elites,  ought to begin speaking  out against the perfidy of the rogues in their midst,  whose greed has given their class such  a bad name - as a self-preservation measure.


That unfathomable greed,   is digging,  what in extreme circumstances - if our nation were to descend into chaos, for example  -  might very well eventually turn out to be the middle  class's mass grave.


What members of our political class don't seem to realise, is that  the watering hole they are  drinking  in,  with such gusto, is actually the Last Chance Saloon.


Alas,  ordinary people appear to have come to the rather painful  conclusion that whiles politicians,   members of their family clans, as well as their cronies,  are prospering mightily in the 4th Republic, the so-called  democracy dividend, after years of sacrifice upon sacrifice on their part, has eluded them. And they are pretty angry about it.


Asked for their views about the state of the Ghanaian polity, this is the consensus arrived at, by the aforementioned group of young artisans:  the 4th Republic appears to be underpinned by  a system   designed  to provide tailor-made legal protection,  for one set of our educated urban elites - which  rose to power after the overthrow of  an elected constitutional regime,  in December 1981.


The system then    subsequently fell into the hands of yet another set of clever politicians -  who won the votes of ordinary people in December 2000 to get into power, by telling them that they had already made their fortunes, and were coming to make Ghana a better place for its long-suffering people.


After a short while, ordinary Ghanaians  were astonished to discover some of the same people,  then turning round to ruthlessly exploit the system too.


And  as a  golden age of  business blossomed   for a powerful and greedy few - and those they favoured -  those elected self-seekers prospered mightily,   from January 2001 to January 2009.


Today, they are witnessing yet another set of clever self-seekers from our political class -  who for three and a half years,  instead of labouring to  make Ghana the  better place they promised voters in December 2008, have rather worked hard to find what they thought (until the wily Kennedy Adjapong popped up with Woyomegate) was a fail-proof method of siphoning off taxpayers' money into private pockets by stealth.


The  lucrative wheeze they apparently  hit upon, was  lobbying for judgement-debt payment orders,  awarded to claimants who had sued the Republic of Ghana, by the law courts,  to be paid  promptly by the state.


What apparently triggered off  the aforementioned group of young artisans'  survey of the political landscape,   was the reported  kettle-calling-the-pot-black comments made by a former minister of information in the previous New Patriotic Party (NPP)administration, Mr Stephen Asamoah Boateng - accusing the present administration of making some US$9millions disappear.


Yet, he  himself is on trial in the law courts as we speak,  accused, with others,  of ignoring proper procurement procedures,  in  awarding a refurbishment contract for work to be carried out  in the information ministry, while   serving as  minister there. Astonishing.


Perhaps the best way for the smaller opposition parties to defeat the two biggest parties, the National Democratic Congress (NDC) and the NPP,  which dominate our nation's politics so completely, is to call for a fresh start for Ghana - by promising to abolish the corrupt and patently inefficient  4th Republic:  and set up a new 5th Republic.


They must ensure that that 5th Republic will be  underpinned by a constitution designed to make Ghana a fair and honest society, which  demands that all elected office holders, from the president down, as well as the higher echelons of the public sector, and their spouses,  publicly publish their assets -   immediately before assuming office,   and immediately after their tenure ends.


Given the newly-revealed oil industry smoke-and-mirrors shenanigans (revealed by the think-tank IMANI), indeed,  the smaller parties would be wise to start planning for a new 5th Republic now -  to give  Ghana a fresh start and ordinary people a real stake in the governance of their nation. A word to the wise...


Tel: 027 745 3109.


Email: peakofi.thompson@gmail.com

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