‘MORGUE
BAPTISM’ IS IMPRACTICAL IN FIGHTING CORRUPTION AND HIGHLY
UNTENABLE
Kofi Opare Hagan
June 12, 2014
It's really shocking that Prof. Badu Akosa would engage in such
regrettable froth on the issue of corruption. I am completely
appalled that a man whose party has trusted him enough to make
him the 'shadow Minister of Health' would suggest such a
populist solution to an otherwise serious issue.
I wonder if this is an indication of how Prof. Akosa intends to
fight corruption at the Ministry of Health if the CPP wins the
next election. He would march all his colleagues in Cabinet, I
suppose, to the Government's mortuary and show them 'how the
bodies have been arranged'? How practical!
At best I can only rationalize his comment by thinking that
being a pathologist Prof. Akosa is only recommending a medical
solution; however, what Prof. Akosa should know is that
corruption is a social canker that cannot be addressed so
summarily from a sedentary position such as his, given from a
consulting room. Nor can it be addressed, at least effectively,
through radio rhetoric.
Comments such as those of Prof. Akosa in my view trivializes the
fight against corruption and has the potential of eroding by
gradually nibbling the disgust that Ghanaians must feel towards
corruption and those who engage in it. It normalizes it and
makes it seem less of a crime than rape or murder. It transforms
into an absolute moral issue an act that is criminal according
to our statutes and attempts to remedy it by an appeal to
conscience.
But why won’t Prof. Akosa’s ‘solution’ not work?
I am not sure when Prof. Akosa had his first encounter with a
cadaver. It must have been many years ago. I assume being human
he found the sight of the naked, lifeless body, worrying as it
rested on the surgical bench.
Like many medical students I assume his reaction was one of
terror, and then disgust. Today, I am sure Prof. Akosa won’t
mind a quick break to have lunch if he feels like it while
performing an autopsy.
A constant exposure to corpses has removed from him the natural
emotional reactions that the average person would express upon
being confronted with such a sight.
His emotional response however is not different from the
emotional response of the average person. A constant exposure to
the horrific and sadistic pornography of corpses would achieve
the same results. Eventually people would become desensitized.
What is worse, it would erode the 'fear' of death and the faith
in an afterlife two key factors that have kept corruption in our
society from getting worse than it already is.
There is some glimpse of the future Prof. Akosa’s solution would
create.
If the shadow Minister for Health has himself taken a 'morgue
baptism' recently, he would realize how pervasive corruption is
at the morgues. Yes, even there, there is endemic corruption.
Morgue attendants, if the shadow Minister for Health care to
know, take bribes. They collect money from people who send their
deceased to the morgues under the assurance of quality care.
Bodies of people whose relatives refuse to pay such bribes are
left, literally, to rot. These are facts so notorious that it
would be shocking indeed if the shadow Minister for Health is
not aware of it.
It would be strange to suggest that morgue attendants are a
special breed of people who lack the mentality or emotions that
Ministers of States as human beings have. If they are crude,
cold and uncaring of the sensibilities or sensitivities of those
who have lost their relatives; it is the result of time and
‘morgue baptism’.
The Prof would also acknowledge the corruption in the Medical
fraternity. Worse than that, is the cruel disregard for the
worth of human life that underpins the value system of doctors
in the country. Yes, doctors in Ghana generally have no regard
for human life. And why, don’t they haven regular morgue
baptisms?
I would rather have the current crop of corrupt Ministers than
what Prof. Akosa's solution would breed. Prof. Akosa's solution
would breed ministers who wouldn't even pretend to be ashamed as
people die due to their direct acts of corruption because death
has become another happening in paradise for them.
But more serious than the misguided views on how to fight
corruption is what seems to underlie Prof. Akosa's
recommendation. One gets the sense that the Prof implies an
insidious tolerance for the backward state our mortuaries are
in. In civilized societies, people who visit mortuaries are not
confronted with decomposing bodies scattered haphazardly on
mortuary floors.
The shadow Health Minister really should be condemning the
disgusting, horrific pornography that greets the eyes of people
who visit mortuaries rather than seeking to turn our mortuaries
into tourist destinations.
He should be telling us how he is going to ensure in places like
the Tema General Hospital, bodies would not be brought out of
the morgue and dried in the sun every day under his watch
because of power fluctuation, and how he is going to ensure that
the bodies are not left to decompose or left to be fed on by
mice.
I believe the issue of corruption is complex and requires a
thoughtful approach. Its implications affect millions of
Ghanaians every day both directly and indirectly. Everyone knows
corruption is bad, ironically, even President John D. Mahama.
The solution to this canker however, is not esoteric. It
requires us to realize that we are no longer in the theological
state and that God would not punish the corrupt if we fail to do
so. God would not play the role of the State of enforcing our
laws for us! The State must assume responsibility for the
punishment of those persons who engage in corruption.
State Institutions established to fight corruption must also be
guaranteed a reasonable degree of autonomy to perform their
duties. They must be able to prosecute cases without any
interference from a politically appointed Attorney General.
People like Prof. Akosa must refuse to be partakers in the
political football that characterize discussions on corruption
in this country, but rather be consistent in reminding the
Government that her duties to the citizens of Ghana including
not just telling us that there was corruption under the last NPP
Government but prosecuting those who committed it as well as
prosecuting their members who engage in corruption.
The corrupt must not feel they can get away with it. Punishments
must be swift and harsh enough to show the disgust of society
towards corruption.
That is the only way we can solve corruption! If Prof. Akosa
thinks a morgue baptism is the best way out, then am sorry to
say his apprenticeship to become a substantive Minister for
Health has a long distance to travel.
Kofi Opare Hagan
June 12, 2014
|