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Dan Botwe’s erroneous thinking
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
Ghanadot, July 1, 2010
Member of Parliament Dan Botwe’s opinion that “President
John Atta Mills should show more gratitude to
ex-President Jerry John Rawlings than he is doing since
the former president made him (Mills) what he is today”
following reports that Rawlings is under 24-hour
security surveillance reveals Botwe’s feeble grasp of
Ghana.
Gratitude of all forms, whether in politics or personal
dealings, is a two-way traffic – it is give and take. If
Rawlings made Mills, then Mills, too, made Rawlings. If
we go by Botwe’s logic, then Rawlings should show
gratitude to Mills as Mills have shown to him. This
means Rawlings should respect Mills and not rock the
Mills’ presidency.
Botwe’s views, more coming from an opposition MP (of the
National Patriotic Party) who is expected to demonstrate
intensely critical conceptualization of Ghana and one
who suffered under Rawlings’ military juntas that exiled
him as a student leader, is an affront not only to Ghana
but it also reveals how some Ghana/African elites
rationalize their state as a development and security
structure, more so from Ghana’s and Africa’s painful
history that enabled a man of Rawlings’s contemptible
background to mount power.
Democracy, of which Botwe’s NPP has for long stood for
against the background of deaths, threats, intimidation,
imprisonment and exiles some years ago, is fast
revealing how Rawlings is, a man for long covered by his
military and propaganda machines. In a way, Botwe is
promoting Rawlings’ disorder and I am dismayed that the
NPP, nationally known as elitist, have not come out down
hard on Botwe’s mind-numbing and cheerful take on
Rawlings’ gloomy attitude towards the Mills presidency
and Ghana’s democratic and development future. For in
the final analysis, there is no NPP, NDC or neutral,
there is only Ghana as a development project.
To Botwe, a computer science graduate from Ghana’s top
science school KNUST, who was former Information
Minister and chief national organizer of the NPP, at
issue is national security, more democratic and
development securities, and not whether Mills is
ungrateful to the chronically nauseating Rawlings.
Humanly, let Botwe put himself into Mills shoes and feel
what Mills is going through in the face of Rawlings
appallingly menacing behaviour.
As much as everyone knows, Rawlings has been dragging
Mills down the governance gutter and has been attempting
to mess up not only the Mills presidency but also Ghana.
Why Rawlings is doing this, is left to psychiatrists. No
government in the world in its rightful mind will
tolerate that, for to do that is to commit political
suicide and derail the whole democratic process. Hence,
the reports of Rawlings under 24-hour surveillance
despite denial by Brigadier Joseph Nunoo-Mensah (rtd),
Mills’ National Security Advisor.
And that demands highly objective positioning of Ghana
as a counter-balance to the negatives of Rawlings
anti-Mills mentality, of which Rawlings’ own NDC is
coming to grips with, and not whether Rawlings made
Mills or Mills made Rawlings (as some people argue,
since Rawlings is semi-literate and his juntas were
maintained by the intellectuals of Mills ilk, who
equally exploited Rawlings ignorance to their
advantage). And as the British-American thinker
Christopher Hitchens would say, Botwe “is also a
spectacle of abject political cowardice masking” himself
“as a demonstration of “dissenting” bravery.”
Whether Rawlings made Mills or not, the accepted wisdom
is that that doesn’t make Rawlings terrorize the Mills
regime (and by extension the Ghana) – no civilized
government any where in the world will mortgage its
national security on the altar of familiarity – Rawlings
shouldn’t be allowed to contempt Mills and Ghana. And
Rawlings, if he is a sane man at all (of which he isn’t)
and a good friend of Mills at all (of which he isn’t),
who was his Vice President, should have to behave
properly like all decent Ghanaians and not make fool of
himself by constantly undermining the Mills
administration and Ghana.
That Rawlings has being seriously troubling the Mills
presidency, and by extension Ghana, though they come
from the same NDC, is a fact; that Rawlings is consumed
with destructive egocentrism a la the African Big Man
and Pull Him Down syndromes that endanger Ghana is a
material and psychological fact; that Rawlings has been
threatening Ghana’s national security, especially so
when Mills took power almost two years ago, is
undisputable; that Rawlings’ behaviour will not be
tolerated in any civilized country where the rule of law
is a cornerstone is a universal fact; and that the
reality that Rawlings and Mills come from the same NDC
means he should be tolerated for his disgracefully
appalling conduct as ex-president makes the state weak
(of which Botwe is one of the weaklings as part of the
elements that make up Ghana).
As a lawmaker, Botwe is expected to show higher grasp of
Ghana, more from the point of the rule of law,
especially Ghana’s history and that of Rawlings’. As a
legislator, by implications, Botwe’s reasoning that
because Rawlings is from the same NDC as Mills and
therefore shouldn’t be subjected to the same national
security measures like any other Ghanaian is absurd and
smacks of a state pinned down by threats from primitive
forces – forces that cannot think, forces that are
immature, forces that are paranoid, and caught up in
destructive sentimentality, of which Botwe’s thinking
falls into and makes Botwe a contradictory person.
Botwe’s erroneous opinion is uncalled for at this stage
of Ghana’s democratic evolution, where the likes of
Rawlings are a real and present danger to the system. It
borders on a lie to Ghana’s security and development
wellbeing, and an immense falsification that can only
maintain itself by a dizzying chain of smaller
falsehoods (I am grateful to you, you should be grateful
to me, no matter my conduct), beefed up by wilder and
more-contradictory claims.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong,
Canada, July 1, 2010
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