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Zita and others must step aside

Mon, 20 Sep 2010 Source: Mubarak, Ras

It is standard practice in countries where political communicators, who know

what they are doing attempt to swing editorial opinion, though not with hampers,

but with policy agenda which is more appealing to the commercial interest of

media proprietors.

The Daily Guide and Ghanaian Chronicle newspapers command the highest percentage

of the national private newspaper market, far larger than other competitors and

have a weight of editorial opinion no party could afford to ignore. Therefore,

it is ok if the Mills government wants to increase rapport with journalists and

editors. Sadly however, this government is not even attempting to persuade the

Chronicle and Daily Guide to turn against the NPP and print more items

favourable to the NDC. No - and there’s everything wrong if it is using

taxpayers’ money on journalists who are considered friendly with the view to

influencing coverage.

How can a government that has mothballed spending on higher education and other

frontline services justify to the hard working tax payers who are facing

economic difficulties in their families and businesses that it had

spent 1.6billion cedis of their money on freebies for their friends in the

media? And this comes at a time when an estimated thirty-five percent of the

country’s work force is children who are supposed to be in schools and not on

farms or the streets selling.

The irony of the expenditure is that, hardly would you find any Ghanaian who

understands the content of the 2010 budget. And what a pity if our government

feels presenting hampers to journalists is a strategy in capturing the news

agenda.

Rarely had there been a day in the last four months when the government had kept

just a single success story high up in the news. Government’s attack dogs like

Ablakwa, Omane Boamah, James Agyenim and others have been reduced to mere

onlookers of events.

In spite of the 1.6billion cedis largess allegedly paid to journalists and

buying media, the government’s communications team has become not just impotent

in influencing events but has completely been in the dark about the NPP’s rather

clever but assailable strategy. The NPP has run a very astute and effective

campaign of causing difficulty for the government.

What the people who recommended and forced President Mills to lumber us with

appointees like Ablakwa is that It is one thing holding placards and silly

piddling at CJA demonstrations or being a drab morning show host on Radio Gold,

and it is a completely a different tune designing and installing a media

firewall around a government that would detect and repel news stories which

might threaten a government and neutralise opposition propaganda.

Though some of these appointees are very young, I sincerely think they (Nii

Lantey, Ablakwa, Boamah, James) are ripe not only for retirement but for

residential care. They can’t help improve government’s low ratings and they

won’t stop making vote killing pronouncements.

Another angle to this 1.6billion hamper for journalists is the implications of a

collapsed trust in journalism by the public. When politicians and journalists

enter into a special relationship where journalists are treated to freebies paid

for from the public purse, the People on low income, those without jobs, the

disadvantaged in our country and the fed up man or woman in the street are the

losers. The working class, business community and everyone else are not served

in any better way when politicians and journalists collude to feed on the

people's sweat and toil.

The average politician acts with criminality and gusto, but in becomes a

betrayal if the press joins the politicians in their criminality. This is

damaging to the government but more damaging to media who are seen as the gate

keepers and the voices of the voiceless. The general public has confidence in

the press to act fairly and within the law. It is therefore self-serving for any

government - whether the opposition New Patriotic Party or the ruling National

Democratic Congress – to offer gifts to members of the press ostensibly to

influence reportage.

1.6 billion cedis is a lot of money to be used just for hampers and buying

airtime. It is sadistic; an abuse of public funds, it is abuse of power and an

insult to the millions of Ghanaians who kicked out the NPP for some of these

same reasons.

The media commission, SFO, Financial Crimes Unit of the Ghana Police Service and

every well meaning Ghanaian must rise up and demand a full disclosure; we must

be shown tangible proof of what 1.6billion cedis achieved and who got what. The

NDC believes in an open government, this is the time to show the way.

Finally, the former information minister – Zita, Stan Dogbe and whoever is

connected with the approval and disbursement must step aside until

investigations are concluded and if exonerated – reinstated, otherwise processed

for court for prosecution. These officers' continued stay in office would be an

unnecessary distraction to the government and the NDC and there must be no

attempts of a cover up from the office of the President. Our party, the NDC has

been pilloried for many months now thanks actions by some appointees of

government and the last thing we want is more bad press from a more discredited

party as the NPP.

Ras Mubarak

mmubarak79@yahoo.com

Columnist: Mubarak, Ras