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MANASSEH’S FOLDER: Pastor Mensa Otabil’s “weird” thinking

There are two main reasons some grooms wear gloomy looks on their wedding day. Some may not be very pleased with or convinced about the woman with whom they are taking the irrevocable oath. For others, the heavy expenditure or debt they have to pay after the funfair is enough to keep anything but smiles on their faces.

A morally reborn and significantly improved Kwame Nkrumah, maybe

When I wrote and published my first collection of short political essays and articles, titled Sounds of Sirens: Essays in African Politics and Culture (iUniverse, 2004), which I partly but primarily dedicated to the late President Kwame Nkrumah (1909-1972), I had done enough research to establish the incontrovertible fact that the human rights record of Ghana’s first postcolonial leader left much to be desired.

Most especially, his immitigably barbaric decision to orchestrate the systematic torture and assassination of Dr. J. B. Danquah, my paternal great-granduncle and the putative Doyen of Gold Coast and Ghanaian Politics, on the Condemned Cell-Block of the infamous Nsawam Medium-Security Prison on February 4, 1965, continued to stick to my craw, as it were.

Nevertheless, I decided to publish this collection, heavily inspired by my late father’s image of the man, if also because I was fully convinced that perfection lay well beyond the realm of human existence and behavior. For, let’s face reality, Dr. Danquah was himself as genius and generously talented as he was significantly flawed, positively and negatively.

I make the foregoing observation from the standpoint of one descended from the immortalized but far less well-known Barima Ohemeng (aka Nana Akyea-Mensah, 1895-1944), in particular the legal rampart established by Team Ofori-Atta, II, if you will, to facilitate the suave finessing of the inevitable tentacles of justice by seeking to seriously impugn the credibility of the relatives and kinsfolk of the ritually slain Nana Akyea-Mensah, purely on grounds of the illiteracy of Amankrado Agyeman’s family members.

Amankrado Agyeman, of course, was Nana Akyea-Mensah’s maternal uncle and this writer’s maternal great-grandfather (See Richard Rathbone’s Murder and Politics in Colonial Ghana, Yale University, 1993). Of course, I have also written and published what has been characterized by some critics and scholars of Ghanaian history and politics as my landmark political biography of the man who practically renamed the erstwhile Gold Coast as Ghana. The final decision would, of course, be tabled through a referendum and be resoundingly approved by the country’s electorate.

What inspired this brief write-up, as Ghanaians are wont to say, was the news report of a statement that the 93-year-old Zimbabwean “democratic” dictator, President Robert Mugabe, was alleged to have made to the effect that President Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo was “The New Kwame Nkrumah of Our Time.” It is quite obvious that President Mugabe, who was himself significantly inspired by Ghana’s first president and once lived and taught in Ghana, meant well. But, of course, such good intention, in of itself, does not mean a blind acceptance of a significantly flawed premise.

My own personal observation here and, as always, I stand to be promptly corrected, is that rather than being a contemporary Xerox copy of the old and politically extortionate President Nkrumah, Nana Akufo-Addo would rather be healthily and positively envisaged as a composite reflection of the pantheon of Ghanaian leaders, both politicians and statesmen and women.

Ultimately, however, President Akufo-Addo is uniquely privileged to carve an enviable niche for himself, as well as establish himself in the hallowed pantheon of Ghanaian, African and major world leaders.

Author's e-mail: okoampaahoofe@optimum.net

Marwako’s PR nightmare: Why they got it all wrong!

Somewhere in 2012, then as a Public Relations intern with Infocus PR Consultancy. One of the earliest lessons I learnt was that in periods of crisis it is better to be seen as the victim rather than the villain. 

Marking six decades of Africa's Black Star: A hopeful dance of momentum and inertia

Ghana has quite a story to tell. It was the first country south of the Sahara to wean itself off colonial rule. With power to govern now firmly rested in her own hands, Ghana’s different leaders will over time set her destiny on many different paths, with the Ghanaian people also contributing to what will become a chequered history of bright and blight.

Beyond the speech and personal example, Mr President

Going through President Akufo Addo’s maiden state of the nation address, I was impressed that he spent three-quarters of his 16-page speech on the issue of our attitudes as a people. On page 3, the 4th paragraph, he stated that “Mr. Speaker, to give a fair account of the state of our nation, I have to give an account of the state of our economy, of our governance and of our national culture and attitudes”.

Independence or in Dependence?

We will follow two simple rules: Buy American and hire American.”? President Donald Trump, Inaugural Speech (January 20, 2017)

Georgina Wood, and the women who rose

Last weekend my daughter and I had a weird WhatsApp conversation. As I sat through the funeral of the late Kofi Taylor, I informed Abena, that I was feeling very sad and worried about how my end would be; the world has become too uncertain, and too cruel.

African tales in presidential ministrations, shamans and charlatans

Irrespective of how it is acquired, the belief is popular among many African communities that “power comes from God”. Around the continent, atheism is not a natural vote winner and when, at the end of the contest, they get installed into powerful positions, many politicians organise “prayers and thanksgiving”.

Open letter to His Excellency Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo

Dr Steve Manteaw, Chairman of the Civil Society Platform on Oil and Gas (CSPOG), has written to President Nana Akufo-Addo on some of the key governance challenges that thwart efforts at fully harnessing the socio-economic potential of Ghana’s oil and gas industry.

Election of DCEs, $1m fund and development nodes can compensate for new regions

In developing countries, decentralisation has become a buzzword, working in tandem with the ideals and principles of democracy to bridge the development gap between urban centres and rural areas. Decentralisation and specifically municipalisation have received near-universal acclamation due to the yawning gap in the supply of and availability of economic and livelihood opportunities between rural and urban centres. A comprehensive programme of decentralisation began in Ghana in 1988 with the promulgation of PNDC LAW 207-leading to the creation of 110 Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs).

Will there ever be an end to violence against Jews?

Over thousands of generations now, the Jewish community continues to be easy target of intimidation and deeply-rooted prejudices that manifest itself in some of the most creative form of evil ever inflicted on a particular race, or group of people.