Ghana, Nigeria’s calmer cousin, offers a number of lessons on how the business of government should be conducted
For
the better part of last week, Ghanaians were involved in an impassioned
debate over the Flagstaff House, in Accra, which served as the
residence and home of Ghana’s first post-colonial leader, Dr. Kwame
Nkrumah. The Flagstaff House had sparked controversy in the past, most
recently in 2008, when it was reconstructed and commissioned by the
government of Mr. John Kuffuor, Ghana’s president at the time. It was
then renamed Jubilee House and designated the Presidential Palace. The
Kuffuor government had defended its decision with the explanation that
Osu Castle, the current seat of government, was unbefitting for a
Ghanaian president because of its link to the slave trade, a dark epoch
in African history. Osu was one of the many castles used by European
slave traders to hold their captives before transportation to foreign
plantations.
The decision to upgrade the complex, which is located
on an expansive piece of land and has an imposing façade, was met with a
huge dose of public anger. The reconstruction had been carried out with
a $30 million loan from the Indian government. This coincided with a
period of economic gloom in the country. “There was fuel shortage,
stratospheric inflation and dire need of infrastructure, particularly in
the rural areas,” said Arthur Baidoo, a businessman. In the run-in to
the 2008 presidential election, the complex, widely viewed as a symbol
of unaffordable vanity, provided the National Democratic Congress, NDC,
represented by the recently deceased Professor John Evan Atta Mills,
plenty of ammunition to shoot at Kuffuor’s National Patriotic Party,
NPP. According to the NDC, the money used in the construction of this
building should have been utilised in rural Ghana, which was crying out
for infrastructure in health, education and other areas.
And on 7
January 2009, when Mills was sworn in as president after defeating Nana
Akufo-Addo, candidate of the then ruling NPP, he refused to use the
Flagstaff House as the seat of government, preferring Osu Castle. The
Flagstaff House was given to Ghana’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs for
temporary use, after its offices were gutted by fire.
Last week’s
raging debate over the Flagstaff House was sparked by the announcement
that President John Dramani Mahama, Mills’ successor, had ordered that
his predecessor be buried at the complex, which he criticised as a
symptom of waste while he lived. The opposition NPP merrily seized on
Mahama’s directive as an evidence of hypocrisy, given that Mills refused
to live in the complex, which he branded as not socially relevant.
Those who do not want Mills buried there argue that all the country’s
dead presidents were buried at their hometowns and want Mills buried in
his hometown of Tarkwa in the Western Region.
Those who want him
buried in Flagstaff House argue that it is the honour he deserves,
having stabilised the country’s economy and put it on the path of growth
in the three years he spent as president. Mills’ rejection of the
grandeur of the Flagstaff House was not a one-off. Having inherited a
pallid economy, there was a clear need to trim much of the extravagance
around political office. While campaigning, he criticised Kuffuor’s
convoy, which Mohammed A. Abu, a journalist and business consultant,
described as having multiple vehicles. Mills brought his down to five
vehicles. The five regional ministers (equivalent of governors in
Nigeria) bought into that. They have two-vehicle convoys, one aide and a
policeman as security detail.
Ghanaian presidents also
demonstrate a lot of modesty and humility. Former president John
Kuffuor’s humility is legendary. He demonstrated this during the 2008
CNN/Multichoice African Journalist of the Year Award in Accra, Ghana. At
the Gala Night where the finalists would be announced, Kuffuor appeared
in a convoy of just two cars. There was neither security cordon nor
ear-drum-blasting sirens.
“Is this all the security that Ghana can
give its president?” a Ugandan journalist asked, adding that “Yoweri
Museveni would not even attend a gala night!” The Ugandan added that if
Museveni was going anywhere, “there will be a huge security blanket.”
Months
before the gala night, a car had run into Kuffuor’s vehicle as he was
driving to his private residence, near the African Heritage Hotel,
Accra. He did not reside at Osu Cattle or the Flagstaff House. He went
to work from his private residence. In other words, he was living among
the people.
This is in sharp contrast to what happens when
President Jonathan or his wife, Patience, travels either by land or air:
everywhere is shut down. Whenever the plane of the President or his
wife wants to land or take off, no other aircraft lands or takes off.
Recently, the first lady visited Lagos, shutting down the commercial
city in the process!
With regard to the retinue of staff and
official vehicles that Nigerian rulers use, Ajayi Opeyemi, an analyst,
wrote that government at all levels spends so much monthly without any
significant impact on the general well-being of the citizens. An average
local government chairman in Nigeria today, according to Ajayi, has
four Sport Utility Vehicles, SUVs, attached to his office, that follows
him to and from work daily. He also has Chief of Staff, Senior Special
Assistant, Supervisor for Special Duties, Personal Assistant for
Political Matters, Personal Assistant for Community Matters.
As
Ajayi put it: “The ones for the office of the First Ladies of the 774 LG
councils across the 36 states are different. Each of these aides has at
least two SUVs – one official and one utility – and enjoys fat
salary/allowances. An enormous amount of money is spent monthly to cater
for the expensive lifestyle of these political functionaries. The truth
is that by the time the councils pay staff salary and caters to the
expensive lifestyle of the political office holders, there is usually
little or nothing left to spend on developmental projects for the
council area.”
Then Ajayi moved to the state governors who have
bullet-proof official vehicles with surveillance camera and bomb
detectors attached to them. An average Governor, as Ajayi argued, has
one official car and two utility vehicles attached to his office. The
convoy of an average Governor moves around town with: one official car,
two utility vehicles, two escort vehicles, one Chief Security Officer
vehicle, one State Security Service vehicle, one police van and others.
“Apart
from the cost of running the office of a Governor in Nigeria, the
retinue of personal staff is also a source of concern,” wrote Ajayi.
These are: Chief of Staff, Deputy Chief of Staff, Special Advisers,
Senior Special Assistants, Special Assistants, Executive Assistants,
Assistant Special Assistants and others.
In fact, Governor Isa
Yuguda of Bauchi State attracted criticisms when he appointed over 1,070
aides. According to Adewale Maja-Pearce, a writer and social critic, in
a piece entitled, “Yuguda’s 1,070 Aides and the Nigerian Malaise”,
these aides are confined to hanging about the streets of the capital
waiting for an audience with the man they are supposed to be advising.
He
added: “Given the sheer number involved, even the governor himself must
sometimes be confused by the conflicting advice on this or that issue
that must surely be the result of such rich pickings at his disposal.
After all, it will be incumbent on each of them to ensure that they come
up with a fresh angle to the particular area they specialise in, lest
they be thought to be simply parroting one another.”
The writer
argued that it is possible, of course, the governor himself is “unaware
of what many of his advisers even look like, never mind what they are
supposed to be doing as they report for work each morning, hoping to get
an audience with the exalted one”.
Ghana’s government, by
Nigerian standards, is a considerably lean one. There are 10 government
ministries and the constitution provides for not less than 10 ministers
and not more than 19 ministers of state, who are permitted one aide
each. But Francis Kokotsu of Associated Press explained that aides also
tend to acquire huge powers and draw privileges. He added that it is
wrong to assume that the Ghanaian politician is averse to patronage,
saying “there is very little to spread around here”. In Kokotsu’s view,
resources are so lean that there is not much to fritter on providing
“jobs for the boys”.
The calmer disposition of the government in
Ghana, explained Kojo Pumpuni Asante, Senior Research Officer, Ghana
Centre for Democratic Development, is partly cultural. According to him,
Ghanaian cultures, with the exception of Ashanti, take a dim view of
display of extravagance in any form. “It is a huge political issue if
you are perceived to be extravagant. You could be voted out of office
just for having a long convoy. People feel a certain inequity and
conclude that leaders don’t care about them when they see long convoys
or other signs of extravagance. This has created in our politicians a
need to be restrained,” said Asante.
Exactly what a Ghanaian
legislator earns is largely a subject of speculation. According to
Asante, the base pay of an MP is 10,000 Ghana cedis (about $5,000) a
month in basic salary. That works out at 60,000 Ghana cedis or $30,000
per annum. And that is the only taxable part of what the legislators
earn. MPs who are members of commissions or boards earn more money
through part-time work from sitting allowances. They also, like their
Nigerian counterparts, get housing allowances estimated at $3,000 per
month or $36,000 per year. Vehicles are provided for their use. After
four years, the government writes off the cost of the vehicles for them.
A
senator’s annual salary, according to Osun Defender, is over N182
million. In addition to the regular and legitimate salaries and
allowances of over N17 million ($113,333) and N14.99 million ($99,933)
which senators and House of Representatives members get yearly and the
irregular allowance of estacodes, duty tours etc, the medium reported
that “they were also getting over N192m ($1.28m) and N140m ($0.93m)
respectively in illicit quarterly allocation”.
It added that
effectively, a Nigerian senator was taking home at least $1.40m ($1.28m
quarterly allocations plus $0.113m regular salaries and allowances) as
against the $0.174m an American senator takes home. Hence, a Nigerian
senator earns at least eight times as much as an American senator and
more than three times the American president.In a newspaper article
entitled ‘An Assembly for looting’ written by Musikilu Mojeed with Elor
Nkereuwem, the authors claimed that each of the 360 members of the House
of Representatives was getting N35 million in quarterly allocation
while each of the 109 senators pockets N48 million.
Beyond this,
as it is the case in Nigeria, there is great opaqueness around earnings.
According to an analyst, legislators, ministers and heads of boards are
thought to earn inappropriate sums from contractors.
A lot,
however, has improved about its electoral process, which has boosted its
credentials as a democratic nation. In December, the credentials will
be put to test in another round of general elections. Political
competition and its associated rantings and raging, particularly by
Ghana’s two leading parties – NDC and NPP – is creating some discomfort,
but many observers, local and foreign, believe that peace will
prevail. Ghana has built a reputation for credible elections, as
evidenced by the defeat of the candidate of the ruling party in the last
presidential election, which was free of the kind of spite that is a
fixture on the Nigerian electoral circuit.
And very recently,
Ghana offered another lesson when Vice-President, Mr. John Dramani
Mahama was sworn in as president less than 24 hours after the death of
President John Atta Mills on 24 July. Before his death he had travelled
abroad for medical check-up and made sure he handed over to his deputy
before travelling. This sharply contrasted with the grim circus that the
Nigerian public was made to watch in 2010, when President Umaru
Yar’Adua became incapacitated and incapable to continue to rule as
president. The government was hijacked by certain personalities, who
showed indifference to the constitutional provision that the
vice-president should be made acting president when the president is
incapable of discharging his duties.
In 2006, when the government
of Ghana budgeted $20 million (about N3 billion) for the celebration of
the country’s 50th Independence anniversary the following year, it was
called a misplaced priority and heavily criticised by many Ghanaians as
too high. But this turned out to be very modest contrasted with what
Nigeria budgeted – N10 billion (about $67 million) – for its 10th
Independence anniversary in 2010. In fact, Ghana’s total expenditure on
its anniversary was slightly higher than the N2.65 billion Nigeria
budgetted for building what the government called “a befitting Golden
Jubilee Plaza” in the Federal Capital Territory.
In the
expenditure outlay submitted to the National Assembly for the occasion
by President Goodluck Jonathan, he said the office of the Secretary to
the Government of the Federation would spend N6.4 billion; the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, N600 million; Ministry of Information and National
Orientation, N1.2 billion; Ministry of Women Affairs, N105 million; and
Aso Rock Presidential Villa, N510 million.
In addition, the
President said N100 million would be spent to replace the carpeting at
the International Conference Centre, Abuja and N2.65 billion to
construct a Golden Jubilee Plaza, also in Abuja, while N1 billion would
be spent on ceremonial uniforms for all military and para-military
agencies including the Army, Navy, Air Force, Police, Customs, Prisons,
Immigration, Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, NSCDC, and the
Federal Road Safety Commission, FRSC.
Not unexpectedly, the
Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, criticised the N10 billion budgeted for
the celebrations, calling it “wasteful”.
“…We are of the view that
the details of the over N10 billion Independence anniversary
expenditure in the supplementary appropriation bill submitted by the
President to the National Assembly contain very frivolous and
extravagant items in the context of the mass misery and poverty in the
land particularly under the prevailing cash squeeze due to the global
economic crisis, which government uses to deny labouring people their
legitimate rights,” a press release by the NLC read.
While the
Labour body acknowledged that such Jubilee warranted some degree of
jubilation, it, however, said that “given the popular national gloom due
obviously to our stunted growth in many aspects of our political
economy, our leaders ought to use the 50th Independence anniversary as a
genuine platform for deeper self-examination and commitment to the
structural and institutional development of our nation”.
It is not
that Nigerians or the presidency are not aware of profligacy in
governance. In fact, General Theophilus Danjuma, as head of the
Presidential Advisory Council, counseled Jonathan to cut down the high
cost of governance. But the President waved this advice aside, arguing
that his appointment of 42 ministers was a constitutional matter.
Analysts argued that if he actually wanted to heed the advice, he would
have sent a bill to the National Assembly for an amendment. With this
obstinacy, it is as if Nigerians are up the creek without a paddle!
Ghana
is not the prefect democracy, but it seems to have conquered a few
demons that Nigeria is still battling with. A 2009 survey report by the
Ghana Centre for Democratic Development rates Ghanaians’ ranking of the
country’s democracy as satisfactory despite the fact that the pace of
economic growth is not as quick as they would have wanted. “Based on the
findings, we conclude that the Ghanaian democratisation process is
advanced in comparison to many African countries and is generally on a
safe course. In addition, Ghanaians continue to endorse many aspects of
democratic practice and appear to be attached to democratic values such
as electoral choice and limited government,” said the report.
Source: PM News
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