THE COUNCIL OF STATE NEEDS TRUE
POWER AND PROMINENCE
David Azuliya
December
07, 2013
Long before the advent of colonial rule, a traditional
system of government was in operation in different parts
of present day Ghana across different ethnic groups with
underlying commonalities.
What took central place under this system of government
was the structure of organization and representation:
this was skewed towards the most elderly and respectable
persons of society with regards to the power to make
decisions.
This allowed for a formal recognition not just of the
men who wore gray-colored hair; but of the honor,
dignity and wisdom with which they have so lived their
lives.
It rewarded the dignity of the aged and associated
attributes of ageing with monumental wisdom much averred
by all and magnified the authority of the elderly before
the very eyes of the younger generation who ought to
admire and aspire to similar standards.
The traditional system was to a greater extent
influential in making cultural values sacrosanct and
adorable as proper etiquettes for regulating moral,
religious and social lifestyles.
This system with its values and principles therein,
built a strong and unshakable perceptual culture in the
people at the time with strictly guarded definition of
morality.
With a system so tightly regulating the passions and
behavioral attitudes of the people with utmost
efficiency, a very suitable and stable environment
existed for the pursuit of the economic, social and
political aspirations of the people.
However, recent African obsession with western styles of
governance and democracy has cast a huge snare on the
African traditional system of governance and ridiculed
it in the very eyes of the grandchildren of the rightful
authors of the traditional system.
As a result, African nations including Ghana are
strongly divided many times within their own countries
along political and ethnic lines in the name of
competitive democratic contests for the sole right to
manage national resources.
In any case, even as modern democracy has become the
adopted king of the African palace in the name of
ensuring orderliness in the face of fair representation
in decision making and transitions from one government
to the other, the paradox of it creating chronic fatal
conflicts and drawing iron curtains between previously
friendly and united communities cannot be overlooked.
Nonetheless, there is still one important remnant of the
traditional system of government in Ghana in the Council
of State as created in Articles 89 to 92 of the 1992 4th
republican constitution.
According to the constitution, this body of prominent
citizens is to counsel the President, Ministers of
state, Parliament and other institutions established
under the constitution. This body is analogous to the
council of elders in the traditional system of
government and serves to preserve traditional authority
and values.
It ought to be noted strongly that the twenty-five
members of the Council of State comprising former
officials of state including Inspector General of
Police, Chief of the Defense Staff of the Armed Forces,
Chief Justice; President of the National House of
Chiefs; elected representatives of the ten
administrative regions; as well as eleven other
appointed members by the President are all part of the
infamous Article 71 office holders who draw substantial
sums from the nation’s consolidated fund every four
years.
This points to the important status assumed by the
Council of State in the structure of the nation’s
decision making. The additional fact of the Council of
State representing the authority of the traditional
system of government and the cultural values of the
nation spells out the clear important role the Council
of State ought to play in the life of the Ghanaian
nation.
However, if the important role and status of the Council
of State ought to be strengthened to ensure that it does
not remain a mere rubber stamp, there should be a second
look at the core functions of the Council of State
vis-à-vis two clear limitations that currently stand on
its way.
First, the President, Ministers of state, Parliament and
other institutions of state can choose whether or not to
refer a bill(in the case of the President) or any matter
to the council of state for advice.
Second, the President, Ministers of state, Parliament
and other institutions are not bound to accept the
advice of the Council of State.
In the wake of these two clear limitations staring the
Council of State in the face, the huge financial muscle
attached to the Council will be a serious waste if it
has not the power to hold any of the organs of
government in check; and worse of all if its painstaking
consideration of national issues and subsequent advice
can be sidelined by the institutions it is so mandated
to counsel.
In the wake of these limitations that hold back the
Council of State as a truly prominent and powerful body,
the Constitution Review Commission’s report as well as
the subsequent Government’s Whitepaper on the report
both fail to grant enough power and prominence to this
very important body.
Therefore, three important propositions are of essence
to ensure that the Council of State remains an important
state body.
First, the constitutional provision creating the Council
of State ought to be reviewed to empower it to a
reasonable extent of being capable of seeing its counsel
taken seriously by its beneficiary institutions. This
can be done by either binding decisions of the Council
of State on the organs of government or requiring them
to answer to the Council as to their inability to accept
the Council’s advice.
Also, the Council should be in a position to launch into
any activity of the state in its effort to provide much
needed advice without waiting to be called upon.
Second, if the prominence of the traditional set-up of
the Council of State as well as its sanctity as a
national body is to continue to exist, the membership of
the Council of State ought to be broadened to include
truly prominent senior citizens and trimmed of the
large-scale political appointments that characterize it.
It is good that the Constitution Review Commission
recognized this need by recommending the downsizing of
appointed members from eleven to five. This will create
space for very important institutions of state to be
represented on the Council.
It is, however, disappointing that the Government’s
Whitepaper stated government’s inability to accept that
recommendation.
Finally, to ensure that the Council of State continues
to preserve the nation’s identity and interest and
generally reflect the face of the nation, its tenure of
office should be made to outlive successive governments
but not collapsing to ground zero following the elapse
of the presidential tenure. This will ensure that the
Council maintains consistency with national interests in
the performance of its core mandate.
As the country places urgency on the need for resourcing
all state institutions to boost their capacity of
attaining national goals, it is important that not only
financial and human resources be given prominence; but
also, the resource of a binding and biting authority.
A review of the powers and relationship of the Council
of State vis-à-vis the other state institutions is
particularly crucial given the current state of
political polarization such that only institutions as
the Council of State can do the magic of providing
national focus to the nation’s development agenda. What
is needed is of such institutionsto command the
prominence, nationalism and authority to imprint their
acts of nationhood on the nation’s development.
Fortunately, at this time that the work of the
Constitution Review Commission is yet to be implemented,
it is important that significant power be distributed in
a manner to reach the players who can hold the various
segments of the country in the middle to prevent it from
falling apart.
With a powerful and nail biting Council of State for
that matter, the traditional values of the country which
remain the nation’s only true identity among many
nations on the face of the earth can be safely guarded.
And as well, the actions and inactions of the various
organs and institutions of government can truly be
checked to assure the nation of the promise of its
founding fathers.
God bless Ghana.
David Azuliya
Tel: 0505005012
Email: apaladola@mail.com