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Stop attacking Ben Ephson

Sat, 5 Jun 2010 Source: Sidibe, Abdul

Last week Ben Ephson’s Daily Dispatch published the observation of the Economic

Intelligence Unit (EIU) in which they observed that the NPP would be losing the next

election. Subsequently, the party unleashed their unforgiving bees on Ben as if he

had committed a felony against the almighty NPP. But wait minute, it was the same

Ben Ephson who called the 1996, 2000, 2004, and 2008 elections for the NPP. Despite

all the odds against the party in the second round of the 2008 election, he still

maintained the NPP was likely to win. Ben Ephson was a good friend of the NPP then,

but the worse enemy of the party now. He may be wrong sometimes, but the personal

attacks on him for carrying the observation of EIU, an independent and credible

body, are very unfortunate, brutish and very uncivilized.

However, civility is not an NPP cut of tea. The tribal gang always want stuff in

their favour. As soon as the tables are turn on them, they act as if a civil war is

about to ensue. The institution of the NPP lacks the appreciation of democratic

elections as a contest between competition ideas. To them elections are zero-sum

games and they imbibe and relish the Machiavellian concept of winning at all cost

and all times. To these ethnic entrepreneurs, the end result is what matters, and

not the fairness of the system. The system is only fair when they win, everything is

wrong with the electoral system if their so-called party is on the losing side. The

attack on Ben, therefore, came as no surprise to keen observers of Ghanaian

politics.

Ben was attacked as if he had committed a blasphemy. Again, what was wrong with

observing that the ethnic clique would lose the next elections? Is it that such an

observation is likely to affect the ethnic voter’s moral in the next election? By

whining about the story everyday on internet and radio, doesn’t the ethnic

enterprise know that it is giving the observation further legs to travel as far as

the eyes the can see?

Moreover, the reasoning of the EIU was right. The chance of an NPP victory in the

2012 election is as slim as the tip of a Ghanaian broom. Ghanaians are living

witnesses to their eights of disaster government. A government that left the country

with mountains of debts, most of which was used to reward ethnic cronies. They turn

the country into a transit for drug barons with their members of parliament as

“chief drug pushers.” It took the US port authorities to expose the NPP and its

association with illicit drugs with the arrest and imprisonment of Mr. Amoateng. NPP

lawyers have made millions off this trade though their back room negotiations with

state apparatus and conniving judges.

The ethnic clique government turn a very peaceful country in 2000 into the war zones

of ethnic conflicts. Before 2000, most Ghanaians perhaps didn’t know that there are

groups in Dagbom (Andanis and Abudus) and perhaps never thought Bawku, with it

vibrant markets and cross boarder activities, would explode into the hot bed of

carnage and refugees. It took the NPP only eights to inflict on the country the

demonic ethnic politics never seen in Ghanaian history. Within eight years in

Dagbom, they have turned sisters and brothers against each other solely for their

own political objective; an objective g that never materialized as they have lost

election after election in the Region at large since the gruesome killing of Yaa Naa

and forty of his elders.

If NPP deserves anything from Ghanaian, it should be the shrinking of their party

back to their bases in the Ashanti region. A region where the Asantehene is the mini

God that should be worshiped; where elections are seen not on the basis of party

platforms and reasoned arguments, but on the allegiance to the Ashanti kingdom and

their euphony. Ghanaians are not ready to turn the country into the abyss of the

dark ages, to quote Winston Churchill, when kings and queens are worshiped as if

they are representatives of God on earth and when political goods and representation

are distributed based on ethnic origins.

It took the citizens of mother Ghana eight years to wake up from their sober sleep,

but they are finally awake. The EIU was right; NPP will lose the next election.

Losing election is not new for the NPP; they had lost three elections thus far. It

is not unfair to one more loss to their camp.

Abdul Sidibe

agolumusah@yahoo.com

Columnist: Sidibe, Abdul