Source: Ghana Leadership Forum
November 10, 2014
Corruption in
Ghana -
Arab Spring, Black
Spring?
Nii Armah Kweifio-Okai
November 10, 2014
Those who have read Africa
Confidential (AC) over time would have
learnt that the paper is rarely wrong on
predicting political winds in Africa. Their
correspondents are mainly spies, current and
past diplomats with contacts in their posts
of service in Africa as well as from local
whistle blowers or gossipers in existing or
past high positions in the military, civil
service, politics, etc. They also have
significant connections with British
diplomatic intelligence and often reflect
its anxieties.
AlJazeera
The phenomenon dubbed the Arab spring was
well described by Tanzanian MP Hamisi
Kigwangalla in an article titled “Why was
there no ‘African Spring'? ” at http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2014/07/why-was-there-no-african-sprin-2014724133730619939.html
In that article, the MP wrote: “Many people
had hoped that sub-Saharan Africa would
follow suit, and that there would be an '
African Spring'. To the surprise of many,
there has been no revolution of any sort so
far, or even a protest wave close to what we
saw in Northern Africa. Although we have
similar circumstances — corruption,
embezzlement of public property,
unemployment, worsening economic hardship
among citizens, and in some countries,
overstayed regimes — why have we not had our
“spring" as of yet?”
The MP answered as follows why there has not
been African spring at the time he wrote the
article on 24 July 2014
- “Democratic elections and inclusive
parliamentary democracies
- “A much smaller urban middle class than
most of the countries in the Arab world
where the Arab Spring was experienced”,
raising issues of mobilisation
- “Weak civil society and fragmented
political scene, which has precluded the
formation of a wide, united front against a
ruling government in sub-Saharan Africa.
- “Most African countries have not seen
organised protests with such frequency in
the past decade
- “When Arab revolutions erupted, this
immediately rang alarm bells across
sub-Saharan Africa, where governments had
the time to learn from Arab leaders’
mistakes and take measures to prepare for
such an event”.
The MP asked “so will we have an African
Spring in the very near future?” and
answered: “Although looking back, no one
predicted the Arab Spring, many scholars of
the African political landscape find it
inevitable. We did not witness an African
Spring, but that does not mean we are safe.
We have our own generation of corrupt and
autocratic leaders and bureaucrats, -- There
are growing inequities, rising rates of
unemployment, and an unbearable cost of
living. We also have an active youth that
constitutes a huge chunk of our population,
as well as a rapidly expanding literate and
urbanised middle class.”
Africa Confidential
AC takes up the issue of a Black Spring in
its current issue (Vol 55, No 22, 7th
November 2014) although too smart to use the
Black Spring descriptor.
See
http://www.africa-confidential.com/current-issue
http://www.africa-confidential.com/article/id/5837/Firefighters_against_an_inferno
Titled “Firefighters against an inferno”, AC
wrote:
- “ Popular anger at unemployment, political
corruption and crony capitalism is now
targeting governments across the region”
- “ A new set of economic troubles is
assailing the region’s economies. The signs
are that the IMF and the World Bank are
going to be busy in West Africa; their
officials speak of the need for economic
reforms as big as those in the 1980s. Ghana
is trying to agree a three-year reform
programme with the Fund but its officials
find the levels of public sector spending
cuts demanded politically unpalatable.
President John Mahama's government faces a
tough choice between deep cuts in recurrent
costs – with wage cuts and redundancies on
the state payroll – and abandoning some much
needed capital investment to develop power
and water services, said an official close
to the talks. By further reducing foreign
exchange earnings, the falling oil price is
worsening the budgetary problem.
- "As governments across the region grapple
with worsening economic pressures, officials
fear that the proposed tough remedies will
add to an already long list of discontents:
anger at youth unemployment; the increasing
cost but unreliability of electricity and
water; static or falling wages; rampant
corruption and rent seeking by the political
and business class. Those political
discontents are likely to play out in the
sort of street demonstrations seen in the
main towns of Burkina Faso last week and,
earlier this year, in Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana,
Nigeria and Senegal. Across the region,
there are an unprecedented number of
presidential and parliamentary elections due
in the next three years, which could trigger
political change or confrontation. The
signal from Burkina Faso is that people are
no longer waiting for governments to take
the initiative”.
The outlook for Ghana
It would be folly to cobble together the
conditions that led to popular revolts in
the Arab spring and apply to Ghana of today
— for reasons I would not delve into at the
moment. However the perception and reality
of corruption in some state parastatals
involving award of contracts — the common
denominator of almost all the corruption
exposed to date, together with corrupt or
inefficient law enforcement agencies and the
judiciary, may well be entrenching beach
marks to create problems for the Government
from which it may emerge only with
difficulty.
Corrosionpedia at http://www.corrosionpedia.com/definition/146/beach-marks
defines beach marks as: “macroscopic
progression marks on a fatigue fracture or
stress-corrosion cracking (SCC) surface that
indicate successive positions of the
advancing crack front. They take the form of
crescent-shaped macroscopic marks on fatigue
fractures representing positions of the
crack propagation, radiating outward from
one or more origins.”
I use the descriptor beach marks to liken
and dramatize the consequences of not
nipping the problem in the eyes and minds of
the public.
Unlike some, I happen to believe that the
Government can overcome most of the problems
it currently faces — economy, energy, water
etc. but even success this side of the
elections may be overshadowed by the
perception that corruption associated with
awards, and unmeritorious performance, of
mega contracts have gone unpunished. The
Government must undertake to step up current
corrupt investigations and embark on high
profile prosecution of corrupt persons.
The Government must cast its mind on the
social media landscape and on internal
complaints to understand how every
corruption in Ghana is laid at the doorstep
of the executive, either directly or by
moral responsibility.
There are currently investigations into
corruption ongoing. There are audit reports
that need be acted upon urgently. There are
tax evasion and tax minimization schemes
ongoing.
Over 25 years ago, a commission of enquiry
was launched into corruption allegations in
the Queensland police force. See http://www.ccc.qld.gov.au/about-the-ccc/the-fitzgerald-inquiry
When the inquiry was announced, I who had
lived under the wide spread corrupt
Queensland Police swore nothing would come
out of the investigations. I was wrong! In
1989, a colleague at Queensland University,
who had won the Queensland elections and
became Premier of Queensland that year, had
the onerous responsibility of doing justice
to the investigation findings. He did not
disappoint and in the process changed the
face of Queensland from a corrupt state to a
clean state where honour in public service
became a virtue. Wayne Goss died today aged
63 and I am sure God would be smiling on
him.
President Mahama too can do it. God knows
there are so many out there waiting to
pounce if he is unable or unwilling to do
it. And Africa Confidential has picked up
the vibes.
Nii Armah Kweifio-Okai
November 10, 2014
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