| Ghana: Interview with former President Jerry Rawlings. |
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| Written by Eucharia Mbachu | |||||||||||||
| Wednesday, 07 March 2007 | |||||||||||||
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Rawlings served as the President of Ghana from 1979 to 1999. During these twenty years he transformed himself from a military ruler to a civilian politician. There are contending views about his regime and its policies. This interview provides us with his reflections on and attitudes towards his administration and current issues affecting Ghana. His responses mainly were focused on Ghana and its immediate neighbors. Here are some extracts from the interview:
Mbachu: Mr. President. I would like to get an assessment of your activities and achievements since you left office almost eight years ago? RAWLINGS: I was invited by the United Nations to campaign about the dangers of HIV/Aids in Africa. Also I was invited to join a few other associations engaged on political discourse and discussions that was going on in the world. I have also served as a member of political groups made up of former heads of states. The Interaction Council serves as a meeting place for former heads of states to share their knowledge and experiences of government. However, it is invariably focused on the USA. The African Forum consists of former African heads of states who were democratically elected. The African Presidential Archives originated from the efforts of former US Ambassador Steve who had served in Tanzania. The focus of this group has been primarily to create a platform for the communication of ideas and to allow the participants to teach and share their experiences as former heads of states. When I received an invitation to participate in this forum I was unable to leave the country at that time because of the impending false and fabricated criminal charges against me. Of which if I had left the country I would have been declared wanted for crime. But I had to stay behind in order to defend myself. Mbachu: What were the major highlights of your presidency? RAWLINGS: Our regime was made up of military men and women of integrity as well as civilians. During my regime, one of the things we did was infrastructural developments, rebuilding of roads, rural electrification, provision of clean water, and access to good education and health care. As a responsible government, we inserted into the regime a sense of accountability and integrity, because a united nation must have a sense of purpose and vision, and generally defiant and demands from its rulers as well as from the masses accountability and integrity. This is how we were able to achieve so much during our regime. Before coming to power, 29% of the population mainly privileged city dwellers enjoyed power supply, when we left the government over 87% of the population had power supply. This was made possible by the transformation of our ports and harbors. Ghana after Kwame Nkrumah achieved the best political stability of all times. We handed over power to a democratically elected government after three months of leadership. With the aim that the political level and social justice we empowered would be a lasting legacy for other African leaders and the world in general. But Ghana is at the brink of losing all these due to President John Kufuors short sightedness and corrupt regime. The government of John Kufuor is destroying the roads we built and rebuilding them at four times higher costs than what we used in building them. Most of the contracts are awarded as political favors to party members or families, and friends. We used to import rice at about two hundred million dollars a year and this resulted in massive rice distribution; we provided the money, secured the lands and invested in this project. But unfortunately someone messed up along the line, and the present government has used this as a pretext to jail 2 innocent ministers and ceased their genuinely acquired properties. Right now the Presidents brother is one of the major rice importers and his daughter is one the major importers of the jute bags in Ghana. Mbachu: How did you reconcile your humanity to the self-aggrandizing powers of the presidency? I was nothing but a simple pilot, yet I did not feel intimidated because I knew my country was full of brilliant and intelligent young men and women who were ready to take the country to the highest level of governance. Contrary to one of the books I read while growing up the beautiful ones are not yet born (Ayi Kwei Armah) This book had a great impact on me because I knew right there that so many beautiful ones were very much around only they were not given the opportunity and space to stand up at the political platform. But only the ugly and the corrupt can stand at the platform and oppress these beautiful ones. This becomes the monopoly of the roughs. We achieved so much within a short space of time, that tourism became the third sources of national earning. Because of this transformation and stability in Ghana we developed people of intellect and integrity. I realized that all we needed to accomplish our aim was three months, and after which we handed over power to Hillary Limman. I was tried and jailed. Mbachu: During this struggle for change in Ghana, can you identify the forces and factors that propel you and your colleagues to action? Rawlings: The principal bone of contention was corruption. This state of things affected all segments of society, including the market which was for the middle class at that time. There was so much corruption in the fabric of the society that managers inflated prices of products and materials to market women. It was alleged that one day a solider wanted to buy a product that was so high, he asked a for price reduction the seller out of anger and frustration of what was happening in the country threw urine on this soldier. I sent soldiers to bring down the structure instead of killing the people (this was a clear demonstration of anger from the people against the government, the soldier representing the embodiment of government, and the structure, showed lack of organized functioning institutions in the country) There was craving for blood by the masses. This was because when a government misleads its people, the people will come to hate that government. There was an eminent revolution in the air. The situation was so volatile that I was ordered to use an aircraft to terrorize the market women. I had to obey orders. But then I sat in the aircraft for over 30 minutes thinking how could this happen, how badly has this country been governed. Mbachu: What was the nature of your relationship with the World Bank? RAWLINGS: The World Bank said that in order for them to continue giving aid and assistance, we must hand over to a multi-party system of government within a year. We had no choice but to compile, it was futile. I was compiled to step in again because the people were waiting on me to do it. Mbachu: What are your views of the present government in Ghana? Have they consolidated the gains of your government? Rawlings: Our past achievements came to nothing; it was a time of great lost. Porter Gus, a former CIA Director in the Bush Administration, came to Ghana to warn the government that corruption was getting out of hand and might result in a coup detat. Months later President Kurfour was invited to USA and President Bush put his hand around him before the press and said this is a man of vision, a man ready to fight corruption. Yes, the Bush administration assisted him to steal the 2004 election in Ghana. The question that lumbers in the minds of decent Ghanaians since then was why no international electoral presence was in sight at the time. And why was Jimmy Carter invited too late? In fact the only monitoring presence seen was the ones formed locally by the ruling government. The West now portrays Ghana as a showcase for Africa. This is because we led the country with good leadership; we used the resources to transform the culture into a culture of boosting economy and infrastructure. We empowered the people with a sense of justice and a true sense of freedom, thereby disempowering social justice and corruption. United States asked us for a multiparty system, we gave it to them, but it is no good to us because we tested it all including, one-party system, socialism, coups and counter coups. None was credible to our people. Rather these forms of government only provided the country with ethnical rivalry and party subordination. The result, it never worked because the objectives were misused by those whom it was trusted with. Ghana leadership was like a pacesetter, angels were made out of an evil government. They use it to terrorize and intimidate people. This makes the government were arrogant. The government that works in a democracy is one that has a counterforce. Mbachu: What are your views on Darfur? RAWLINGS: It is wrong for people to slaughter one another. I dont believe one ethnic group has the right to slaughter another. Those lunatic killers must be pursued and brought to justice. A counter slaughter is inhuman and evil because it perpetuates the same evil that the other group committed. Rather, as an effective way of respecting and saving innocent lives would be to bring into justice any group that took it upon themselves to kill another group. And most of the time, it was the government that instigates this kind of organized hate among different ethnic groups within their respective countries. The case of Rwanda was a typical case at hand. Africa as a nation lacked the power to stop the carnage when it was obvious what was about to happen in Rwanda, but the West kept quite until it was late and millions of people were killed in counter-slaughtering. The world ran away, only Ghanaian troops remained. And this has never been mentioned anywhere in the globe as kudos for those troops. Mbachu: In your view, what is the relationship between national development and moral responsibility? For any nation to function there must be a clear vision of nationalism, patriotism, access to good education, social justice and affordable health care system. The late Pope John Paul helped to bring down communism in Poland, but he also once said:the Savagery of Capitalism Poses another danger to humankind What is happening in Iraq and South America is a display of Tony Blair and President W. Bush impunity. And this is affecting Africa so negatively in the sense that since most African leaders are followers, they would use the pace set by America and Britain to perpetuate their own people. This was what Pope John Paul was saying about capitalism. This sense of triumphant America creates the idea that might is right. In light of this state of affairs in international politics, the Africans are very vulnerable. Their continent does not have the power to pull the brakes. Mbachu: Mr. President, how would you like to conclude this interview? RAWLINGS: In summary, we provided clean water available throughout the country. I was the first president in Ghana who made a public statement against women discrimination and for the women elevation during our regime; we enhanced the culture of democracy by giving them a sense of vision and purpose. through free and social justice for the masses. We gave voice to the poor by empowering them with a social sense of duty. We constructed roads, provided energy throughout the nation. There was visible quality of education and access to affordable health care system. We bridged the disparity between the poor and the rich, between the rural people and the city dwellers We created one nation under Ghana by the Ghanaians and for the Ghanaians. My wife did everything within her power to promote the cause of the women. During our regime she and the regime created opportunities for family planning and provided job opportunities for them. Our regime was the best that Ghana ever had. Our people were at their best.
Eucharia Mbachu is a writer, she is based in Washington DC. For further information on this link, please contact the author acharmd3@aol.com
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Posted by Robot| 07.03.2007 07:13