President Atta Mills has neither the gift of the gab nor the charisma to lead a people, and neither did Moses. The difference, however, is that Moses was not picked by a JJ Rawlings in a Swedru Declaration. The bible says Moses was handpicked by God. And to make up for his obvious deficiencies, God equipped him with the power to perform miracles, most notably, parting the red sea to let his people go. Atta Mills insists God is the president of Ghana and yet the only hint of a miracle from him is the imminent purchase of a military jet that could be used to pursue armed robbers.

It is difficult to impugn the ability of a man of such intellectual and academic excellence. Obviously though, intellectual capacity does not necessarily equate to an ability to lift a people and lead a nation. Gordon Brown had been a well-respected chancellor of the exchequer in Britain and generally considered as the intellectual power behind the modest economic successes of the Tony Blair era till he staged what many people have described as a “palace coup” to get rid of Blair and take over the reigns of power without having had to face a general election. His subsequent fumbling performance as a prime minister and disastrous humiliation in the next election has driven him prematurely into oblivion – a forgotten, broken man.

On the other side of the coin is Al Gore, who was vice president to the ever popular Bill Clinton and yet refused point blank to avail himself of the extraordinary campaigning skills of his then morally tainted boss, preferring instead to be his own man and to fight his own battle. He lost the election but not his pride, nor the respect and admiration of many. He has gone on to be a very successful campaigner on environmental issues. We doff our hats to the likes of Al Gore.

Then there was Atta Mills, a university professor who had never been in politics and was handpicked by the NDC to occupy the tainted seat left behind by the walloped and humiliated Mr Arkaah – a politician who had dared to be his own man and to ask difficult questions in a Rawlings cabinet and suffered dearly for it. This very first foray into the political arena cast a big shadow on the judgement of the man who is now our president. He took the softer option. Even more surprising was the Swedru Declaration that followed, when our learned professor was simply propelled by the then very popular Rawlings to succeed him. He accepted, once again, a rather soft option. By this time, alarm bells should have started ringing out loud about the judgement of the man who hoped to be our president.

Anybody who believes the fumbling Atta Mills would ever have won an election in Ghana on his own merit without the fervent support of Jerry Rawlings and his wife is probably not facing reality. He would hardly have won an NDC primary, let alone a general election and I even doubt he would have bothered to stand at all, seeing how out of his depth he appears to be in the political arena. He dealt the Rawlings card from the bottom of the deck, and then once power had been bestowed on him, belatedly decided to try to be his own man for once, by surrounding himself with lieutenants who posed no threat to him, but some of who nevertheless remain an embarrassment to the government and the people of Ghana. A Team B side (apologies to Spio-Garbrah) can offer nothing but Team B advice. And the fact that the president even allows himself to be swayed by these people, casts a slur yet again on the judgement of the man. We are talking here of people like Baba Jamal, caught on tape advising civil servants to lie, and exaggerate and be dishonest while disseminating government information or be dismissed. I take serious exception to this and to the fact that the president has remained silent on this issue.

Was this just an attempt at spin gone wrong, or an issue that strikes at the very heart of our credibility and brings into question the integrity of not only Baba Jamal, but of his boss and the government as a whole? Silence is no option here! If this is the pervading philosophy in this government, then is it any wonder we cannot get to the bottom of issues? We are no nearer finding the truth about STX or of the proposed purchase of military jets. We are buying black sheep and painting them white. When faced with the wrath of Ghanaians, the minister said he had merely been joking. I am not surprised. The whole government has become nothing but one big joke

Don’t be deceived. “Asomdwehene” and “God is the president” are all facades, calculated to throw dust into our eyes and to disguise our president’s personal weakness as a leader. A football manager picks his coaches and his team, often in his own image, and takes responsibility for their performance. Is it not surprising, that the Asomdwehene has been responsible for hiring some of the most arrogant, undisciplined and verbally virulent individuals to be his ministers. Where is Atta Mills’ political judgement?

At the end of the day, God is not our president. God only permits us as individuals to avail ourselves of the blessings he bestows on us. Times are hard. Economies are crumbling. Our people are suffering. We need to be led out of “Egypt” to the “Promised Land.” We need a president to motivate our people, to inspire and to comfort them, and what do we get? A latter day Moses with impaired judgement and no miracle stick to part the red sea. Heaven help us all

6 COMMENTS

  1. My God, you Africans are truly enslaved, still mentally. The fact that you know this Moses story so well as to talk about Ghanaian politics as if it started with the Jews is stupefyingly stupid. But oh, I get it, you got a first class education from the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science & Technology, and I just have a JSS education from Labadi. The thing is though, I know who my grand—grandparents were, all of them from the time they migrated from Ife, their names, and what they believed in. You on the other hand I suspect, know nothing about your great great grandfather, lest his name, lest where he may have come from. But I can also bet, you know that Bible, which you might even believe is the Word of God, a Holy Book, you might believe, from front to back. There is only one thing that is sure about you – you are lost! Waa yira!

    • At least he has a Ghanaian name – Papa Appiah. Give him some time, his writing will come around.

  2. Critique the man, but stop relating everything and anything to the Jewish Book. Stop it, it’s disturbing as much as it is nauseating. Moses? He performed miracles? Parted the red sea? You’d like to believe all those things wouldn’t you? Just a shame.

    • Mr Appiah I think will become a fine writer of consequence. I think it is good that we get to read some of his stuff and point out how other thinkers feel about his logic and his thought process. He definitely, for now, writes like a European Christian looking from outside-in into Ghanaian politics. That might change in due course, hopefully after he is able to read these comments with the painful consideration of change – positive change. But a admire his style, his pace and his verve.

  3. Mr. Papa Appiah was lost the day he was admitted to St. Augustine’s College. He was given a heavy dose of that European tradition they have come to call Anglican or Christian doctrine. I could only read the first few paragraphs of this essay. The references to Moses quickly put me of for what could otherwise have been a fine critique of Mr. Mills years as President of the Republic of Ghana. It’s a shame what mission schools continue to do with our great minds. Just a fat shame.

  4. I always enjoy Papa Appiah, especially when he writes about the Ghanaian experience. When he delves into politics and the sociology of life, his references tend to sway more towards a European/Western/Christian sensibility towards understanding African politics and African life. I hope he improves in this regard.

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