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Ghana's new ministers

Sat, 13 Jan 2001 Source: BBC

Ghana's new president, John Kufuor, has made 12 ministerial and senior advisory appointments, including putting his brother in charge of the defence ministry.

Dr Kwame Addo-Kufuor, a member of parliament and a medical doctor, was widely tipped to be appointed to the health ministry, because he has shadowed the post since 1996.

But other government members said he would make a good defence minister, and denied there was any family favouritism.

"He's calm, reflective and unflappable and those are qualities the president was looking for," said Elizabeth Ohene, the president's newly-appointed public affairs advisor.

"He was at any rate going to be a cabinet minister based on his professional credentials and performance in parliament, so a question of nepotism doesn't arise at all," she said.

The new chief-of-staff, Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey, formerly John Kufuor's campaign manager, said: "His brother's appointment to defence also demonstrates that he's particularly keen on that ministry and this is as close as he could get to appointing himself to the portfolio.

"His brother is the only cabinet minister who can walk into his bedroom at any time and you need that sort of closeness with the president if you're handling defence in this country."

Currency challenge

Many people had tipped Courage Quashigah, a retired army major and national NPP organiser, for the defence job. He got agriculture instead.

Mr Quashigah, 51, has shown enthusiasm in the subject following a visit last year to Israel where he saw how deserts had been turned into orchards.

"There's no reason why grass should be growing on our land when we're importing food," he told the BBC.

The finance minister is 58-year-old Yaw Osafo-Maafo, an MP, engineer and banker who has consulted for more 10 years for the World Bank in half a dozen African countries.

"My immediate task is to stabilise the currency, lower inflation and interest rates, and try to match our expenditure with revenues -- cut our shirt according to our cloth," he told the BBC shortly after he was named.

Other new appointees include:

  • Foreign minister Hackman Owusu Agyeman, 59 - an MP who spent 20 years working for the United Nations.

  • National security advisor Retired General Joshua Hamidu, 63 - a close friend of Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo. He was Chief of Defence Staff 20 years ago.

  • Trade and industry: Dr Kofi Apraku, 46 - an MP and former economics professor,

  • Ministry of women's affairs: Gladys Asmah, MP and industrialist. The proposed ministry is ostensibly is aimed at enhancing the place of women in the society. But the move to establish such a ministry has been criticised as playing to the gallery. Critics said the government does not need a whole ministry to implement gender-balance policies.

  • Parliamentary majority leader and minister for parliamentary affairs: John Mensah - formerly leader of the minority, and Minister for Finance nearly 30 years ago. His sister, Theresa, is married to the president.

  • Attorney-general and minister for justice: Nana Akufuo-Addo, 56, respected lawyer who lost out in the NPP presidential primaries to Mr Kufuor.

  • Interior minister Malik Yakubu Alhassan, MP for Yendi.

  • Lands and forestry: Dr Kweku Afriyie - third national vice-chairman of the NPP.

  • Local government and rural development: Kwadwo Baah-Wiredu, MP and chartered accountant. His first task is to decide what to do with 110 influential district chief executives (DCEs) appointed by former president Jerry Rawlings. The NPP, while in opposition said they wanted the DCEs to be elected rather than appointed. But it would require a constitutional amendment and that could take months. Now the party has an opportunity to put its own loyalists in charge, will Mr Baah-Wiredu recommend it follows principle or the path of least resistance?

    President Kufuor is expected to name younger people into deputy ministerial positions.

    Equal rights campaigners have been disappointed so far that more women have not been named. They are hoping some of the remaining 10 ministries will include more posts for women.


    Ghana's new president, John Kufuor, has made 12 ministerial and senior advisory appointments, including putting his brother in charge of the defence ministry.

    Dr Kwame Addo-Kufuor, a member of parliament and a medical doctor, was widely tipped to be appointed to the health ministry, because he has shadowed the post since 1996.

    But other government members said he would make a good defence minister, and denied there was any family favouritism.

    "He's calm, reflective and unflappable and those are qualities the president was looking for," said Elizabeth Ohene, the president's newly-appointed public affairs advisor.

    "He was at any rate going to be a cabinet minister based on his professional credentials and performance in parliament, so a question of nepotism doesn't arise at all," she said.

    The new chief-of-staff, Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey, formerly John Kufuor's campaign manager, said: "His brother's appointment to defence also demonstrates that he's particularly keen on that ministry and this is as close as he could get to appointing himself to the portfolio.

    "His brother is the only cabinet minister who can walk into his bedroom at any time and you need that sort of closeness with the president if you're handling defence in this country."

    Currency challenge

    Many people had tipped Courage Quashigah, a retired army major and national NPP organiser, for the defence job. He got agriculture instead.

    Mr Quashigah, 51, has shown enthusiasm in the subject following a visit last year to Israel where he saw how deserts had been turned into orchards.

    "There's no reason why grass should be growing on our land when we're importing food," he told the BBC.

    The finance minister is 58-year-old Yaw Osafo-Maafo, an MP, engineer and banker who has consulted for more 10 years for the World Bank in half a dozen African countries.

    "My immediate task is to stabilise the currency, lower inflation and interest rates, and try to match our expenditure with revenues -- cut our shirt according to our cloth," he told the BBC shortly after he was named.

    Other new appointees include:

  • Foreign minister Hackman Owusu Agyeman, 59 - an MP who spent 20 years working for the United Nations.

  • National security advisor Retired General Joshua Hamidu, 63 - a close friend of Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo. He was Chief of Defence Staff 20 years ago.

  • Trade and industry: Dr Kofi Apraku, 46 - an MP and former economics professor,

  • Ministry of women's affairs: Gladys Asmah, MP and industrialist. The proposed ministry is ostensibly is aimed at enhancing the place of women in the society. But the move to establish such a ministry has been criticised as playing to the gallery. Critics said the government does not need a whole ministry to implement gender-balance policies.

  • Parliamentary majority leader and minister for parliamentary affairs: John Mensah - formerly leader of the minority, and Minister for Finance nearly 30 years ago. His sister, Theresa, is married to the president.

  • Attorney-general and minister for justice: Nana Akufuo-Addo, 56, respected lawyer who lost out in the NPP presidential primaries to Mr Kufuor.

  • Interior minister Malik Yakubu Alhassan, MP for Yendi.

  • Lands and forestry: Dr Kweku Afriyie - third national vice-chairman of the NPP.

  • Local government and rural development: Kwadwo Baah-Wiredu, MP and chartered accountant. His first task is to decide what to do with 110 influential district chief executives (DCEs) appointed by former president Jerry Rawlings. The NPP, while in opposition said they wanted the DCEs to be elected rather than appointed. But it would require a constitutional amendment and that could take months. Now the party has an opportunity to put its own loyalists in charge, will Mr Baah-Wiredu recommend it follows principle or the path of least resistance?

    President Kufuor is expected to name younger people into deputy ministerial positions.

    Equal rights campaigners have been disappointed so far that more women have not been named. They are hoping some of the remaining 10 ministries will include more posts for women.


  • Source: BBC
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