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President Mahama How is Woyome Doing?

Mon, 14 Oct 2013 Source: Mensema, Akadu Ntiriwa

*By Akadu Ntiriwa Mensema, Ph. D.

John Mahama

Sleek like a savannah snake

Like a pito-ed womanizer

Talks, talks, talks

Promises accountability

Chirps, chirps like an akomfem

Nurses akomfem that flies to Burkina Faso

The SADA tree-planter in the dry season

Promises anti-corruption

But Woyome is in our midst

Regaled by Ewe chiefs as their saintly son

Free to travel abroad like a vulture

Free to attend NDC events

Predatoring as leach NDC financer

Woyome’s accomplices are enjoying their loot

Barton-Oduro flies as our vulture

Barton-Oduro represents Ghana in Guinea Bissau

Our vulture represents our vulturing culture

We worship the vultures who prey on us

Ghana’s pen-armed robbers

The killers of the dream

Vultures of the postcolony

Soaring in pen-armed robbery

Worse than the white predators

Worse than the white imperialists

Vultures of the postcolony

That soar in disgrace

The pen-armed robbers

The killers of the dream

The watershed of it all

Of all our problems

Of decrepit electricity

Of poisoned water

Of polluted environment

Of dilapidated hospitals

Of benighted schools

Bloody vultures

In the postcolony

Vultures of the postcolony

Worse than white imperialists

Vultures in flight

Soaring higher in theft

Scouting downwards

Beaks daggers-drawn

Claws deadly-poised

Preying on debts

Praying for debts

Judgment-debts

Praying for 10 percent

Vultures in flight

Looking for prey

In judgment debts

Preying on citizens

Praying for judgment

Pen-armed robbers

They prey on the state

They prey on citizens

Ah! Judgment debts

They prey on it all

Praying for 10 percent

Preying on judgment debts

Pen-armed robbers

Vultures of the postcolony

They prey on the state

They prey on state lands

They prey on state cars

They prey on state hotels

They prey on state factories

They prey on state tractors

They prey on state bungalows

The educated elites

The new imperialists

In the garb of woolen suits

Primeval tie to their throats

Our politicians

Our leaders

Our judges

Our chiefs/kings

Killers of the dream

Freedom will come

One day it will come

We shall arise

To reclaim dignity

The liberation of old

The theology of Tigare

The ontology of Akonedi

True true decolonization

It will rise like the wind

The wind that never stops

John Mahama

Sleek like a savannah snake

Like a pito-ed womanizer

Talks, talks, talks

Promises accountability

Chirps, chirps like an akomfem

Nurses akomfem that flies to Burkina Faso

The SADA tree-planter in the dry season

Promises anti-corruption

But Woyome is in our midst

Regaled by Ewe chiefs as their saintly son

Free to travel abroad like a vulture

Free to attend NDC events

Predatoring as leach NDC financer

Woyome’s accomplices are enjoying their loot

Barton-Oduro flies as our vulture

Barton-Oduro represents Ghana in Guinea Bissau

Our vulture represents our vulturing culture

We worship the vultures who prey on us

*Akadu Ntiriwa Mensema, Ph. D., is a nationalist Denkyira beauty. She is a trained

oral historian cum sociologist and Professor in the USA. She lives in Pennsylvania

with her great mentor and teaches Africa-area studies at a college in Maryland. In

her pastime, she writes what critics have called “populist hyperbolic, satirical”

poetry. She can be reached at akadumensema@yahoo.com All my poems and essays on

Ghanaweb and elsewhere must not be reproduced in full or in part for any academic or

scholarly work without my written permission.

Columnist: Mensema, Akadu Ntiriwa