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Don’t They Feel Ashamed?

Fri, 30 Mar 2012 Source: Damoah, Nana Awere

By Nana Awere

Damoah

When our politicians visit abroad, don't they feel

ashamed when they see/experience the facilities that they fail to roll out for

the benefit of their citizens back home?

When they visit museums abroad, the latest being

President Mills' visit to the Arlington memorial cemetery, don't they feel

ashamed knowing there is no proper museum in Ghana?

Don't they feel ashamed when they see pothole-free,

wide, good roads with properly functioning traffic lights?

Aren't they ashamed when they see efficient and

effective train and bus systems for metro mass transport?

Don't they feel ashamed when our international

airport looks like a bus terminal in another country?

Aren't they ashamed at how illiterate our

university students are, and how literate their elementary pupils are?

Don't they feel ashamed when they experience

uninterrupted power supply?

Don't they feel ashamed when they see buildings and

other structures properly planned?

Don't they feel ashamed that their major

contribution to education consists essentially of debates on the number of

schools under trees before, during and after their respective terms of office?

Don't they feel ashamed that jobless, hungry, party

supporters follow them at rallies sometimes for pittance?

Don’t they feel ashamed when they are met by crowds

of unemployed cheering supporters when they return from trips abroad?

When they take their families to Disneyland, Disney

World, and Great Adventures, don't they feel ashamed they don't have a single

properly designed and built amusement park for our children?

Don't they feel ashamed when they visit industries

over there, knowing the raw materials that fuel them come from our own backyard

at outrageously low prices because we fail to add value to them?

Don't they feel ashamed when they are the ones that

have studied and lived in West and yet allow indiscriminate deforestation in

Ghana and yet wonder why we are experiencing climatic change? Don't they know the

ill-effects of poor drainage (annual floods and it's attendant loss of

life/property)?

Don't they feel ashamed when they don't see a

single open drain or gutter?

Don't they feel ashamed when they visit monuments

named after prominent people in those countries and then return home to pass by

a stinking Nkrumah Circle?

Don't they feel ashamed that party foot soldiers

are stake holders and hold developments to ransom, when they participate in

party activities on invitation?

Don't they feel ashamed when they are given

accurate addresses (house number, block name, street name, geographic

positioning) when they travel, yet they have to use gutters, kiosks, plantain

sellers and children palying football to direct people to their homes in Ghana?

Don't they feel ashamed when they go abroad and are

able to travel between states easily with well planned rail and bus systems yet

back home we don't have a good enough system so we have to spend hours in

traffic bringing down productive hours costing the country a great deal of

production time and money?

Don't they bow their heads in shame that leaders

from more prosperous economies live on comparatively more modest budgets? And

that some of their ministers go to work in public trains?

Don't they feel ashamed that public health

facilities are 'jammed' and in Korle Bu maternity especially most ceasarian

operations are in QUEUE with priority given to 'FIRST TIME BIRTHERS' and

patients have to carry own beddings to wards?

Don't they feel ashamed when people who attend

party rallies abroad are genuine card-carrying members whiles they bask in the

glory of being cheered on by 5-Ghana-cedi-plus-free-party-T-shirt -hired

crowds?

Don't they feel ashamed when they superintendent

over the deteriorating educational system in Ghana yet send their wards to

schools abroad?

Don't they feel ashamed when decent accommodation

is a dream for millions in Ghana, yet is basic in the countries they travel to?

(Even Cuba has better housing that Ghana)

Don't they feel ashamed when a slight drizzle

causes flooding at home, yet it rains heavier for days without flooding in

other countries?

Don't they feel ashamed that children who have to

be in school or at home relaxing have to dangerously sell in traffic?

Don’t they feel ashamed of the lack of an effective

emergency response system (causing avoidable deaths) when help is just a phone

call away in those countries they visit?

Don’t they feel ashamed when the national anthem is

sang in the nations they visit and everyone is on their feet with hands on

chest/breast solemnly yet when they come back their own ministers don’t know

the lines to our national anthem and folks especially the youth would rather be

facebooking than singing the national anthem. Where did the nationalism Nkrumah

and co fight for? Where is the nationalism Sergeant Adjetey and others die for?

Don’t our leaders have any shame?

Do they feel proud of what they see

when they get back home after trips abroad?

[With contributions from Akwasi Yiadom,

Abubakar Ibrahim, Jonathan Agyeman, Henrietta Hammond-Boadu, Francis Kennedy

Ocloo, Efo Kwamiga, Kwame Gyan, Kojo Akoto Boateng, Fanny Awuye, Kola Nut]

Columnist: Damoah, Nana Awere