Fifty years after his death and still remembering
Nkrumah
E. Ablorh-Odjidja April 22, 2022
Fifty years after Dr. Kwame Nkrumah’s death on April
27, 1972, the West is still asking questions about the
impact of his rule in Africa. Behind these
questions is the same intent that was when he was alive;
deliberately done to control the narrative and to limit
his exposure to the sham that is neo-colonialism.
Questions are still asked about Nkrumah’s character,
intellectual acumen as a political leader, theorist,
activist, and philosopher, but none about the deeds of
the West in Africa.
In December 1999, BBC
listeners in Africa selected Nkrumah as “Africa's man of
the Millennium.” Thus, even in death, his reputation has
grown more stellar. And, the West continues to be
unhappy about Nkrumah.
So, the questions still
linger; the trick being to provide his detractors the
opportunity for revisionism and to dredge out or invent
more negatives about Nkrumah.
In 2010, in a
speech given at Pennsylvania University, Gabby Asare
Otchere-Darko, an ideological opponent of Nkrumah,
described Nkrumah as the "personification of the African
tragedy of the 20th century."
Gabby was more
creative than sensible. But, if ever there was a
transparent leader in Africa’s history, he had to be
Nkrumah.
With many books written, perhaps more
so than any other world leader in recent history, it
would be hard for a reader not to note nor understand
his ideas and accomplishments; unless there is the
intentional purpose to do the contrary.
The books are detailed with ideas and strategies that
are relevant for the liberation of Africa from the
colonialism of the West.
All this contrasts with
those of contemporary and successor politicians who
opposed avidly his ideas and rule in Ghana. It should
have been enough to quiet down the aspersions against
him but hasn’t.
So, the feigned curiosity and
questions about his rule continue, as the quest to
reinvent more negative opinions about him and his rule
is pursued.
Starting on February 24, 1966, the
question was why Nkrumah was overthrown. And Wikipedia
has a ready answer.
“Nkrumah led an authoritarian
regime in Ghana, as he repressed political opposition
and conducted elections that were not free and fair. In
1964, a constitutional amendment made Ghana a one-party
state, with Nkrumah as president for the life of both
the nation and its party. Nkrumah was deposed in 1966 by
the National Liberation Council, ….. Nkrumah lived the
rest of his life in Guinea, where he was named honorary
co-president." In sum, this is the narrative
from the like-minded opposition against Nkrumah. He was
authoritarian, repressed political opposition, conducted
unfair elections, had a one-party state, and aspired to
be “president for life” are the arguments. Accepted.
Also, a must to be accepted is that two years after
the imposition of the one-party system, Nkrumah’s rule
ended. He was overthrown by the Armed Forces of Ghana,
in a coup initiated by the CIA, and aided by French and
British intelligence services.
But, did
conditions in Ghana get better after Nkrumah? This is
the question that is never asked.
Then consider
this irony. We are to assume that America, Britain, and
France had so much love for Ghana that they had the
moral obligation to free her of Nkrumah’s tyranny!
Rather, wouldn’t it be healthier to think that they had
the plantation overseer expectation role for Nkrumah (as
exemplified by Felix Houphouet Boigny), which Nkrumah
never fulfilled?
The silly excuses given for the
coup are repeated ad infinitum. Measured against the
realities of Nkrumah’s era, these sound very hollow.
The opposition to Nkrumah was mostly based on
Western ideals, the model being the kind practiced in
Britain, a nation that had abused Ghana’s historical
sovereignty in piecemeal fashions – territorial
conquests small portions at a time. And has done so
through deceit, humiliation, and exploitation under the
guise of planting democracy.
Throughout a
century of colonial governance, the type of democracy
dreamt of by the coup makers had remained ephemeral
under the governors.
British authority was
extremely despotic and the ruling itself was by edicts
and decrees from England. Yet, we acquiesced. How the
coup makers and their enablers came to think that there
was a “lack of democracy” soon after independence and
under Nkrumah was a miracle and a monument to colonial
mentality.
It became obvious when Nkrumah started
promoting “African personality,” as a theme for
self-governance, that he was not eager to play the
plantation overseer role designed by Britain for
post-colonial Ghana.
And more obvious when he
made his intentions known in the many books he wrote,
which ideas were put to practice on the political
grounds.
Nkrumah wanted to defeat the
neo-colonial system; be it British, French, or American.
In the end, it was the same neo-colonialists that
enlisted the collaborators who overthrew Nkrumah.
Under the purported “lack of democracy” excuse, they
took the drastic venture of ushering in the 1966 coup,
which sent Ghana into a tailspin for decades.
Did
this coup and the many others that followed result in
achieving the ideals that were purportedly lacking under
Nkrumah, and if so when?
Under Nkrumah, the
expectation was for a so-called democracy; a concept
that none of the coup makers and their enablers
understood nor were ready to practice when it came to
their turns.
Instead, we saw a culture of
military brutalities, parades of military-style
executions, and the Rawlings style of governance.
Rawlings would survive in government for 19 years
and to make cowards of all the proponents of the vaunted
democracy devotees.
Rawlings survived
because he was never a threat to the West. Nkrumah
didn't because he was. He proposed policies that
had the potential to end neo-colonialism in Africa.
Soon after the 1966 coup, the Nkrumah's anti
neo-colonial policies were drastically reversed through
local political spite and encouragement from
institutions of the West.
Under Nkrumah, Ghana
had an “import substitution” policy that demanded that
anything that could be manufactured in-country never got
imported. To our eternal shame, it was this policy that
was one of the sparks to oust Nkrumah.
The
trumped-up charge of “lack of essential commodities”
gained currency, along with the absurd chant of “lack of
democracy.”
For lack of sardines and cans of
milk, we threw out a critically needed policy of “import
substitution” that aimed to preserve hard-earned foreign
exchange for developmental needs.
South Korea
would pick up the same “import substitution” policy a
decade later and prosper. So, was Nkrumah a
good leader? This question can be easily answered in the
positive.
But the detractors have never bothered to place his
policies in the context of their era. The
West’s expectation for Africa has always been the
plantation variety. And we made the mistake of going
along with the design until Nkrumah arrived on the
scene.
Keeping
Nkrumah's new policies would have been wise. But
to keep insisting that the 1966 coup and the reversals
were the better choices we had would propel some
reasonable people to wonder about our retrospective
sanity.
Instead of comparing Nkrumah’s rule with
some stereotypical unrehearsed ideals of the West, why
not stack the tenor of Nkrumah’s regime against that of
Felix Houphouet-Boigny of the Ivory Coast, a sister
country next door and a declared darling of the West?
Do this and we should soon be able to discern the
huge hypocrisy and the double standards the West always
has for Africa. This would help explain why Nkrumah was
so hated by the West.
President Houphouet-Boigny,
famously known as Le Vieux or the “Sage of Africa” was
held in reverence by the West, at the same intensity
level they used to hate Nkrumah.
He ruled as
president of the Ivory Coast for 30 years; from
independence in 1960 until his death in 1993.
He
ruled the longest, protected jealously by the French,
yet no one from the West, despite the obvious, ever
accused him of being a “president for life” as they did
with Nkrumah.
Through Houphouet-Boigny, the
French did their dirty work in Africa. Under a policy
called FrancAfrique, he aided the conspirators who
overthrew Kwame Nkrumah in 1966.
In 1977, he
took part in the attempted coup against Mathew Kerekoo
of Benin on behalf of the French government. And in
1987, he helped in the overthrow of President Thomas
Sankara of Burkina Faso.
If ever there was a
dictator in West Africa, Houphouet-Boigny was the real
one, but the West didn’t care.
UPI wrote in 1990
that there were “Opposition attempts to break a 30-year
hold on power by President Houphouet-Boigny and install
political pluralism in the Ivory Coast ….”
For 30
years, the Ivory Coast had no political pluralism. Yet,
some 24 years earlier in 1966, the West had already
engineered a coup against Nkrumah for trying to create a
one-party system in Ghana with him as president for
life.
Meanwhile, Houphouet-Boigny in the Ivory
was all that Nkrumah was accused as being, yet he could
get a free pass in the Ivory Coast because he was the
plantation overseer for the French.
Houphouet-Boigny would rule with no multiparty system
opposing him in the Ivory Coast for 30 years.
Nkrumah, for supposedly suppressing democracy and
attempting to set himself up as president for life, was
to last for at most nine years in office.
And,
without the multiparty pluralism being in place in 1989,
UNESCO would approvingly create the “Felix
Houphouet-Boigny Peace Prize” in his name. Just the same
manner in which the Nobel was awarded to President Obama
in 2009.
You may be asked now whether Nkrumah was
a good ruler. But just remember to put the question in
context and to point to the Western powers by asking the
same about Houphouet-Boigny, this famous, rich son of
the Ivory Coast and a dear friend of the French. Then
the double standard and the lies would start again.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher
www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, April 22, 2022.
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