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Ghana's Failings, KSM's Wahala

Mon, 31 Jan 2011 Source: Thompson, Nii-Moi

In his last TV show for 2010, ace comedian and entertainment impresario, Kwaku

Sintim-Misa, apologized to patrons who had paid for regular or VIP seats for his

December 25th show but ended up standing in the aisles of the filled-to-capacity

auditorium of the National Theater in Accra.

It was a decent thing to do, especially since he conceded that some unscrupulous

staff of his had taken money from ticketless patrons and ushered them to seats

that otherwise should have gone to paid-up patrons.

But this seemingly isolated incident of dishonesty and disorganization is

actually a reflection of a bigger Ghanaian problem: Our perennial inability or

refusal to get the basics of our society, our development, right.

I was at the National Theatre that night and wondered, as the ushers

indiscriminately directed patrons, why the seats were not numbered to correspond

to ticket numbers of patrons.

At crowded events like this, I thought, it would also have been appropriate also

to have officers from the Ghana Fire Service present to ensure that the maximum

capacity of the auditorium was not exceeded and that the aisles and all possible

escape routes were clear for any eventuality. First aid staff, including an

ambulance, would have rounded off the preparation.

That's what organized and smart societies do.

But ours is anything but organized or smart, and so we don't do such things.

Indeed, we seem to thrive on chaos and disorganization. From our schools to

markets to highways to churches to communities and government, disorder rules.

Such chaotic existence is at once a cause of the persistence of our

underdevelopment and a result of it.

It's a vicious cycle that breeds inefficiencies and the kind of corrosive

corruption that Mr. Sintim-Misa bemoaned.

Most times, we do get away with it but occasionally we have had to pay a heavy

and tragic price - such as what happened on May 9, 2001 at the Ohene Djan Sports

Stadium in Accra when 126 people lost their lives in a stampede.

That stampede would have been avoided altogether if our police had been properly

trained to know not to fire tear gas in enclosed areas. And certainly the

casualties would have been far less if the injured were given on-site first aid

and taken to hospital in ambulances rather than being piled haphazardly into

taxis.

Much theater was made of the public inquiry that followed, including a trip

abroad by the committee of inquiry to study best practice in crowd and stadium

management.

Very little seems to have come of those costly efforts. Disorder and vandalism

remain hallmarks of sporting and other public events in Ghana. The police who

are supposed to keep an eye on crowds at stadiums, for example, are often rather

seen watching matches with them, oblivious of potential sources of trouble.

Indeed, general crowd management skills of the police appear not to have

undergone any significant change since that tragedy. This was evidenced by the

total chaos that characterized President Mills’ inauguration at Independence

Square on January 7, 2009.

It was a disturbing replay of what happened at the 2001 inauguration of

President Kufuor, when unruly crowds broke through barriers manned by

indifferent police officers, and visibly terrified guests like then Nigerian

President Olusegun Obasanjo sought safety with the assistance of a small and

clearly overwhelmed security detail.

Or consider the dozens of passengers who yearly die “on the spot when their

vehicle ran into an abandoned truck on the highway”. The phrase is almost a

standard in Ghanaian journalism now, and 2011 had scarcely started when on

January 7th, three chiefs and their driver from the Central Region were killed

after their vehicle, in the words of one journalist, “rammed a broken down

articulator truck in the middle of the road.”

Sadly, if the past is any indication, many more Ghanaians may die through these

senseless and avoidable accidents before the end of the year.

What is it about us? What does it take to remove broken down vehicles from our

roads to prevent such accidents? What does it take to learn from the folly of

our tragic ways? What does it take to be an organized and disciplined society?

In putting his wahala out there, KSM promised to do something about it. Are

Ghanaians ready to do likewise about their institutional failings?

Credit: Nii Moi Thompson.

Columnist: Thompson, Nii-Moi