|
Re: Will the NPP’s Akufo-Addo Ever Learn Any Lesson?
I have read carefully an article written by Dr. Michael
J.K Bokor with the above heading, published on
myjoyonline.com on Tuesday July 7, 2011.
I thought it necessary to respond to the write-up
because the Dr. obviously lacks a clear understanding of
the man Nana Akufo-Addo, and his message to the people,
and has unfortunately decided to share this sheer
ignorance with the rest of Ghanaians and beyond.
But is the Dr. truly ignorant? A careful reading of the
article immediately exposes the author’s pretence to be
confused about Nana Addo posture and his message to the
electorate and is trying dubiously to disseminate this
self-inflicted confusion to the millions of discerning
Ghanaians who have embraced Nana Addo’s message. I think
it is a dangerous attitude and must be condemned in no
uncertain terms. It is surely not the way to go in our
politics and the Dr. and his pay masters will not have
their way with this one, or any others.
Dr. Bokor writes in the article that barely three weeks
after mentioning in London that he would not base his
electioneering campaign on promises but programmes and
projects, “Nana Addo is out, either knowingly
contradicting himself or – by some inexplicable
psychoanalytic film-flammery- betraying what really lies
deep in the heart of his politics.”
He quotes a GNA report of July 10, 2011 in which Nana
Addo is said to have reiterated his commitment to the
Chiefs and people of Abirem that he is determined to
lead a government that will make Senior High School (SHS)
education free for all and questions whether “Akufo-Addo
consider(s) this obvious promise-making as different
from the programmes and projects that he touted as the
substance with which to drive his campaign.”
But that is the problem because the Dr. only sees and
hears what he wants to. Nana Addo has been consistent
with his message of coming into government with
programmes and policies. Nana Addo, for example, has
always been consistent with his policy of making
education his topmost priority and also transforming the
economy which will wealth and jobs for Ghanaians. These
policies can also be found in the 2008 NPP manifesto.
On his “listening campaign”, Nana Akufo-Addo gives
people the opportunity to present to him, the problems
and issues that confronts them in their lives and
communities, after which he goes ahead to respond to the
issues raised and also makes a few remarks. Nana Addo
has been very consistent with his message.
He has been speaking mainly about three things. Firstly,
he exhorts the people to endeavour to take the
registration exercise seriously when the Electoral
Commission opens the process later this year and urges
them to encourage also all persons qualified under the
law to register when the time comes. He explains that
once we have all agreed as a people to use the ballot in
deciding who leads our country, we must make it a point
to participate fully in all the processes in that
regard. He makes the point that we have all seen what
the thumb is capable of, adding that it is the thumb
that elected President Kufuor, whose government brought
substantial growth and development to Ghana and the same
thumb has elected President Mills, whose government is
gradually reversing all the gains of the Kufuor era, and
sending the country backward.
Secondly, Nana Addo speaks about education, his number
one priority, and assures the people that his policy
unit is working on a programme that will make sure that
the cost of educating our children, from nursery school
to SHS will be taken off parents and be borne by the
state, God willing under his leadership. He further
states that the concept of basic education will be
redefined to mean nursery school to SHS and no longer
nursery school to Junior High School (JHS) because the
number of dropouts at the JHS level is just too scary
and unacceptable to him. Nana Addo mentions that in his
view, educating the population is one sure way of
rapidly wiping poverty in our country, but unfortunately
majority of the parents are poor and so making the
matter of education a money matter will disadvantage
most of the children and defeat that objective, hence
his determination to lead a government that will make
basic education free. He says it is possible that the
child who didn’t have access to education, is probably
the one who has the brains that if harnessed, could help
our nation make that forward leap.
Still on education, Nana Addo says that the programme
being drafted is a “teacher-based” one that will ensure
that the teacher is well equipped and adequately
motivated to provide quality education and training for
his/her pupils. He mentions that the education policy is
such that under his leadership, the habit of putting up
school buildings without apartments for teachers will be
a thing of the past because he believes that if the
teacher is comfortable and well motivated, students will
be given the quality education and training needed to
grow the country’s human resource base which will lead
to the positive transformation of our country. He says
that irrespective of the place and circumstances of
their birth, every child must have equal access to
quality education because the human mind is the key, and
because social justice warrants it.
The policy unit is examining in depth the prospect of
legislation committing a certain high percentage of our
GDP to expenditure on education to enable proper
planning and execution of the development of this most
sensitive sector of our national life.
Thirdly, Nana Addo speaks about the need to introduce
programmes and policies that will provide the people
with jobs. He says that strengthening the private
sector, especially small and medium scale enterprises,
is a central component of this policy so that people can
expand their local economies, generate jobs and be able
to live improved and dignified lives. This programme is
what he calls “creating a new society of opportunities”:
education, skills training for jobs in an expanded
economy: a hand-up and not a hand-out approach to the
problems that confront our people.
Let me quickly draw the attention of Dr. Bokor to the
fact that Nana Addo talks about programmes and policies
that his policy committee is still working on and that
is also part of the reasons why he has come on the
listening campaign in order to know at firsthand what
the problems of the time are in the lives of the various
people in the various communities, so that the final
programme will be mindful of all the various details. He
does not make promises. Indeed on the same platform,
Nana Addo condemns making promises on campaign platforms
for the sake of winning power and after winning the
power, turning your back at the very promises that won
you the power and denying ever making those promises, a
sad occurrence in our national life in the Mills era. He
thinks it is dishonest and unfair to the people who vote
to bring you to power and he will not do that.
Akufo-Addo is mindful of what he’s doing and has
assembled a competent team to help him do the work. My
observation, as will be the same of most watchers of our
political scene is that the instantaneous positive
response that the “listening campaign” is drawing across
the country, is causing fear and panic to the NDC
government and hence the attempt by their discredited
propaganda machinery to run down the gains of the tour.
The Ghanaian people know better.
It is also clear that the NDC government and their spin
doctors are determined to reduce the 2012 electioneering
campaign to one of personal attacks and wicked lies,
since they will have very little by way of concrete
achievements to trumpet. We would resist any attempt to
be drawn into such useless and unproductive endeavour.
We would prosecute a clean campaign based on ideas,
policies and programmes and we would ensure that our
good message goes to every little corner of our country.
We in the NPP are content to leave propaganda politics
and the politics of lies and fabrications to those who
know no other politics. They can keep lying about us and
we would continue to tell the truth about them and we
leave the rest to the good judgment of the good people
of Ghana.
Neither Nana Addo nor the NPP need any lessons in
political mobilisation from their enemies and
detractors. The latter are better off attempting to
assist the current administration that has all the
hallmarks of the most incompetent government of the 4th
Republic, if not of our entire history. The only growth
industry in the Mills era, this era of recession and
regression, is that of Akufo-Addo haters and NPP
bashers. The louder you can express or do either or
both, the swifter your rise to prominence and riches.
Dr. Bokor is welcome to both.
Nana Addo will keep focused on what he has been doing
for the last thirty five years- fighting for the
liberties and freedoms of the Ghanaian people,
participating in the search for a responsible system of
governance for our nation, helping promote effective
policies for the rapid eradication of mass poverty and
the speedy enhancement of the living standards and
dignity of the Ghanaian people, refusing to accept
mediocrity and backwardness as the natural lot of the
Ghanaian and African peoples, and believing in their
capacity to build admirable civilisations worthy of
emulation by others. These are the matters that will
continue to engage his attention and energies, not
responding to the useless propaganda and crude smear
campaign of the NDC gutter press.
Nana Addo has already publicly refuted flatly the
allegations of cocaine use or peddling or narcotic
abuse. That denial is not convenient to the
“masterminds” (sic) of the NDC, whose only strategy
against him appears to be to stay clear of urgent public
issues or his public record, and concentrate on the big
lie. The big lie was the creation of the unlamented
fascist and communist leaders of the 20th century,
especially Josef Goebbels and Joseph Stalin. They
believed that, if you were bold enough to concoct a big
lie, no matter how outrageous, and to repeat it enough
times, the gullible masses would buy it. They were both
proved wrong, and the systems of governance with which
they were associated remain the most reviled of our
times.
Nana Addo has a much higher estimation of the
intelligence of the Ghanaian people, and is more than
happy to leave his political fate in their hands, free
of unsolicited puerile advice.
By Herbert Krapa
Press Secretary to Nana Akufo-Addo
|