How would you react if someone asked your wife, sister or mother whether she in fact needs all the underwear in her luggage, especially if the questioner was someone she was meeting for the first time and only through official contact?
A few years ago my sister was on a visit home. I know the situation has improved immensely but those of you who have once gone through the experience would recall how some time ago at the Kotoka Airport your baggage be searched through and through by different officers who will then leave them in such a way that, especially under pressure, you find it virtually impossible to close them.
With sweat all over and in a frantic effort to close her suitcase anyhow, she was to hear perhaps the most intrusive question she had ever been asked, and from a man who was not in any way quarrelling with her. Pointing at some underwears which he himself had intentionally scattered all over in the suitcase the obviously irritated Customs Officer queried: ?So madam, do you mean you are going to wear all these ?pieto? on your bottom??
I?m sorry, if that sounds vulgar but I?m happy I didn?t have to say it in the original Twi language in which the question was posed. If you?re thinking the Customs Officer perhaps had a personal problem with my sister, I can assure you that that was not the case. The only problem he had with her was that she was a ?burger? and perhaps, from what he saw, was in possession of more underwear than he considered necessary.
When the Committee of Experts? proposals were published and the public invited to send their comments the following is what I said, as published in the ?Daily Graphic? of 12th October 1991:
?Taking current realities into consideration I don?t see one good reason to use the excuse of not wanting ?an occasion where allegiance to Ghana is shared with allegiance to some other country? to prohibit a full-blooded Ghanaian from retaining his/her citizenship if he/she so wishes. Can anybody tell me the damage this ?sharing of allegiance? does to our national interest?
?On the other hand, who does not know the benefits we as a nation have derived from the ability of some of our compatriots to move freely and work in foreign countries, thus making it easier for them to return home to engage in the various profitable ventures which we all see??
As has always been the case however, the voice of the ?Committee of Experts? was more powerful than the voice of the people and the Constitution was adopted prohibiting full-blooded Ghanaians from keeping their citizenship if they acquired the citizenship of another country. In the mean time, not only was the government singing praises to its sons and daughters resident abroad for their remittances which was helping to grease the wheels of the economy, it was, from the Head of State to Ministers of State, and without discrimination, urging them to send even more, and to invest in the country. Somehow, the Committee had forgotten the saying that ?yenkoto a, yenna? (you have to kneel down before you can lie down).
All over the world today, dual (and in fact multi) citizenship is very common. Nigeria, Switzerland, Canada and Morocco are but a few of the many which I know allow it without any fuss. In Ghana, however, it is considered a special privilege.
When a Nigerian or Moroccan living in Switzerland acquires Swiss citizenship all he/she does is NOTHING! They visit their respective countries with their national passport and return with their Swiss passports because the laws of their land of birth and those of their adopted country allow them to possess the passport of other countries.
For the Ghanaian however, it is an entirely different and much more complicated matter. A full-blooded Ghanaian whose nationality was never in doubt prior to the acquisition of a second nationality is literally required to swear (?Me Do Nyame?) before a ?High Court Judge/Notary Public/Head of Ghana Mission or Consulate Abroad?, by completing a four-page form, that he/she is indeed ?of good character and Ghanaian by birth...?. In addition, he/she has to, among other things, provide (a) ?evidence of Parents? nationality ? Passport, Voters ID Card, or Birth Certificate? and (b) ?addresses and telephone numbers of parents and two relatives in Ghana?. Thereafter, at the pleasure of the Minister of Interior, a certificate and Identity Card signed by him would be issued to the applicant.
Whether or not the Honourable Minister has the power to withdraw the citizenship of a Ghanaian because he has acquired another nationality as permitted under the Constitution is unclear to me. How much time he has, to be able to personally sign the ?Dual Nationality Certificate? of each and every Ghanaian who has acquired the citizenship of another country, in addition to all other pressing issues, is however, a different matter altogether.
After all the panellists had presented their arguments they were asked to make their final submission. The following is a summary of what fell out from the mouth of the gentleman who could simply not hide his dislike for his brothers and sisters whose only offence was that they had travelled outside the country:
?You mean those ?burgers?? I actually don?t know what those people want from us. When we are suffering here they have ran away to enjoy better life in other countries. During Christmas and Easter seasons they come with their flashy cars and play loud music to disturb us and do all sorts of things. They also snatch our girls from us. And as if this is not enough they now want us to send ballot boxes to them where they live so that they can vote. What nonsense is this? If they want to vote, why don?t they come home and vote?? I leave it to you to make your own judgement. But it saddens me that someone can be so mean that where a matter of national interest is being discussed his own worry is about people he believes are only interested in snatching his girl-friends from him with their flashy cars. The last time I recall hearing a similar remark was way back in the mid-sixties when I was a kid. I was on holidays from secondary school one evening when I heard an obviously agitated town playboy murmuring to himself but intentionally to my hearing: ?You these foolish boys. You return from secondary school after one term and just because of khaki trousers and white shirt you snatch our girls from us?. The difference though is that unlike the well educated and knowledgeable member of a radio discussion panel, this one was a semi-literate rural womanizer who found students a threat to his kingdom. Moreover that was more than 30 years ago.
I really wouldn?t have paid much heed to this remark if it had come from one of the several unidentifiable callers. But to think that a panellist on a live programme reaching thousands of listeners not only in Ghana but also in all corners of the world could spit this out really saddened me. For one thing, I do not believe that the programme?s producer just looked outside his window and invited the first person he saw to come and participate in the programme. In other words, this gentleman must be someone holding a responsible position in the Public/Civil Service, the media or even a political party.
So how do you expect such a person to be able to make an objective decision on any issue involving his sworn enemies - ?these buggers?? Unfortunately there appears to be so many like-minded people in the system. They may not necessarily be ?anti-burgers? but just out of envy and personal bias they would do everything in their power to make life difficult for others.
The government may have the best intentions in the world but the bottom-line is that somebody somewhere will have responsibility to implement decisions or serve the people. After declaring this year as a year of action against corruption therefore, the government would do very well to ensure that only the right people, and not those whose personal interests take the better part of their actions, are put at the right places. If not and we are all pulled down to the ground floor there may not be enough space for everybody.