I have
read your reaction to my write-up on Kwesi Pratt should be the last person to
pontificate on national affairs and I must confess I feel sorry for ‘hitting
you below the belt’ by including your name among those I referred to as
hypocrites. You are indeed like a brother to me and I am sorry for my choice of
words and expressions to describe you and the panel that took part in the
discussion.
The role of a moderator or host of a programme:
But Kwame, you cannot totally absolve yourself of blame. You see, Kwesi Pratt
is a very mischievous person, a contention I will repeat anytime at any forum.
And if you give him the leeway, he will steer the discussion to satisfy his own
whims and caprices. And this, my dear Kwame, was exactly what you did on that
fateful day. You abdicated or should I say, relinquished your role as moderator
of the progamme and the wily fox (Kwesi Pratt) took advantage of lack of checks
to unleash his long and pent up venom against me. I will entreat you to play
back the tape and judge for yourself whether indeed, your really performed the
role of a moderator.
Kwame, I
take strong exception to notion that we must highlight the positive aspects of
our nationhood which seek to unite us and de-emphasize the negative ones which
seek to divide us. I regard such a statement coming from the great Kwame Sefa
Kayi as the worst mantra of the century. Are you suggesting that we must not
discuss negative aspects of our development just for the sake of peace? Don’t
we have to disagree in order to agree? So if we notice any negative trait which
is likely to affect our corporate existence as a nation, don’t we have to bring
it to the notice of Ghanaians and the appropriate authorities with the aim of
finding solutions to it?
A
statement was made. You may call it an allegation or anything. Why don’t we
find out whether the allegation is factual or was the figment of the person’s
imagination? It is only after we have investigated and found out that it is untrue
that we can jump at the writer and tear him to pieces as you and your panel
did. Not even one member of the panel thought it prudent enough to suggest that
what the person had alleged needed further investigations. And this, my
brother, was what surprised me most with you as the moderator.Caution was thrown to the wind and that in
itself was like hitting me also below the best.
Kwame, I
expected you, as moderator of the programme to call for restraint and even a
halt when it dawned on you that Iku Kwesi Pratt was at his best element
attacking people who are not of his own political dispensation. After the
programme had ended, you could have called me to ask for my own reaction to
such a sensitive and volatile national issue. It was only Bobbie Ansah of
Asempa FM who called me to react to the discussion on your programme.
Kwame, I
still take you up on your contention that anything that seeks to divide us must
be swept under the carpet. In other words you want us to go back to the era of
the culture of silence which was akin to the state of nature when life was very
short, nasty and brutish. The Bawku crisis persists today because those who
have the power to act have for political reasons refused to tell the truth the
way it should be told. And by the way, how do you come by what is negative and
divisive and what is positive and unifying? I bet, if you were to take a survey
of Ghanaians, you will find out that most people share the similar sentiments.
Since
the discussions, a lot of people have sought to demonize me by calling me
uncharitable names, all due to your mishandling of the programme and allowing
Iku Kwesi Pratt to bamboozle, harass and intimidate you into ceding your role
as moderator to him. To those who have doubted my Christian principles I leave
them to their own personal opinions and judgement. But I don’t begrudge them
for anything. I want to refer such people to what Jesus did at the Temple when
he used the whip and turned the entire place upside down. At that time, most of
the people regarded him as anti-establishment. His voice then was the only one
in the wilderness. He opened the eyes of the ordinary people and today the
people are much wiser.
Kwame,
what I sought to do in my write-up was to create an enabling environment where
Ghanaians would be free to live in the country as one people with one common
destiny. This will eliminate suspicion and prevent those from other tribes from
looking at Ewes as their enemies. What President Mills is doing is setting up
the Ewes against the rest of the country. This is very bad. Instead of calling
on the President to rectify this seemingly orchestrated policy of deliberately
setting one tribe against the rest of the country, all you could do was to
describe me as a nation wrecker, tribalist and unpatriotic, then I say May God
have Mercy upon us!
We were
all in this country when Togbe Afede made his infamous pronouncement to the
effect that the Ewes had felt like strangers on their own land during Kufuor’s
administration even though he Togbe Afede had enjoyed some 'largesse' under
Kufuor including Board membership of Bank of Ghana. Kufuor was very
instrumental in ensuring that his power project saw the light of the day. When
I took him up on his unguarded statement, many were those who descended heavily
on me. To buttress his point, he cited the example that Kufuor had never
attended any festivals in the Region. He had a point on that but that never
made the people in the Volta Region second rated citizens. Now Kwame, can you
tell me your reaction to that public pronouncement by Togbe Afede? What did Iku
Kwesi Pratt say about that? Was that not a dangerous statement capable of
cementing the divisive tendencies that already exist among the various ethnic
groups that constitute our nationhood?
Ex President Rawlings tirade against Ashantis:
Kwame, I hope you do recollect ex-President Rawlings ethnic remarks about the
Ashantis during the Chereponi bye-election. He said during his regime, he had
advocated for family planning, but the Ashantis, for political reasons shunned
his call. Was that not an indictment of Muslims whose religion allows them to
marry more than one wife? Strangely enough, not Kwesi Pratt, not even you,
Kwame Sefa Kayi spoke against it. Did you at that time subpoena him to your den
to be subjected to the kind of tirade you and your panel poured on me? Not even
a verbal reprimand!
People are worried about Mills’ style: The
Chief of Nsein made a public comment about attempts to sideline his ethnic
division on appointments and refusal of the Presidency to give them audience at
the Castle. The Chief obviously was speaking the minds of the silent majority.
Recently, when the Okyeman University at Bunso was to be officially opened, the
President was invited as the Guest of Honour. He accepted to be present, but on
the day of the inauguration, he was conspicuously absent. Not even a junior
Minister or Staff from his office was sent to represent him. Some will say
Ofosu Ampofo was present. Yes, he was present, but not as a representative of
the President. He was invited in his official capacity as Regional Minister and
obviously as someone from the Okyeman Division, he could not afford to be
absent. Already, people are saying the President’s failure to attend the
function is a slight on Okyeman. I do not agree with the proponents of such a
notion.
All that
some of us seek to do is to drum it into the ears of the Advisors to the
President and the Council of State that all these seemingly innocuous remarks
by individual citizens of Ghana should not be treated with contempt. They
deserved urgent attention from the Presidency, and the earlier this was done,
the better it would be for our corporate existence as Ghanaians.
The
Zoning System: The fact that I have raised such an issue
does not make me a tribalist. Vibrant nations are built with contributions from
all sections of the country. In the same way, the national cake is shared
proportionally among all the ethnic divisions of the country. And that is why
zoning has become entrenched in the politics of Nigeria. If the President comes
from the South West as it was the case during the regime of Obasanjo, the
Senate President would have to come from the East while the speaker of the
House of Representatives comes from the Core North and the Majority Leader comes
from the Middle Belt. That was done to ensure peaceful co-existence amongst the
ethnic groups that constitute the Nigerian Federation. If the President erred
and made appointments, not in consonance with the zoning system of the party or
country and somebody brought it to the attention of the public that would not
make him a public enemy as you and your panel sought to portray during the
kokorooko programme which you hosted. After all, if someone from my tribe or
region is given appointment, it will neither add nor detract anything from my
personality. Is he going to put free food on my table? Obviously, not! So, why
should I bother my poor head over it? But my concern is that not everybody sees
such appointments from my own perspective. And it is such danger that I want
averted anytime I pick up my pen to write. People question my credentials as to
what I did during the NPP regime. I did write many articles critical of
Government handling of certain sensitive issues. I would refer readers to the
piece titled “The Man Died" which was an indictment of Government’s and
the Police handling of the Anlo’s crissis. The “other side of the story” also
condemns the Government and the Police on the Teleku-Bokazzo mining crisis. I
have taken the Asantehene on some issues I regarded as being detrimental to the
growth and development of the country. Reader should read my write-ups on
“Manhyia Should Speak Up” and “Abolish this obnoxious Law, Okyeman”. . So when
people sit down in the comforts of their rooms and studios to lauch verbal
attacks on my personality, such people do not know what they are doing.
The
Nigerian Situation We always use Nigeria as example
of many situations that are likely to occur in this country if we do not put
things in their right perspectives. It will be pertinent to remind fellow
Ghanaians of what happened in Nigeria when Major Gideon Orkar staged his
abortive coup. He felt t was time to remedy the perceived injustices the Middle
Belt and the other areas had suffered at the hands of the core-North which was
made up of the Fulani oligarchy. He decided to excise the core-North from the
rest of the country. Thank God, the coup was crushed. Let us not behave like
Nero, the mad emperor who was playing the fiddle while Rome was on fire.
Kwame,
let me also refer you to the immediate cause of the Nigerian Civil War. It was
the fear of domination by any of the three major ethnic groups that
precipitated the crisis. The first coup was led by Ibos and most of the
casualties were Northerners. It is said that there was the tacit understanding
among the planners that the leadership at both Federal and Regional levels were
to be eliminated. The President, Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe was an Ibo, Michel Okpara
was the Prime Minister of the East, Ahmadu Bello, the Saduana of Sokoto was a
Hausa Fulani andPrime Minister of
Northern Nigeria. Sir Tafawa Balewa was the Federal Prime Minister and also of
Hausa Fulani stock. Samuel Ladoke Akintola was Prime Minister of Western
Region. The two regions, minus the East had their leaders executed. There was
the unsubstantiated allegation that the coup was staged to give Ibos a
domineering position in the country and that Azikiwe might have been alerted to
flee the country before the coup. Whether this was what actually happened or
not I cannot say. But suffice it to say that, the Hausa-Fulani felt they had
been short-changed and so staged a counter coup,. Ojukwu refused to accept the
leadership of Yakubu Gowon with the excuse that Brigadier Ogundipe was the next
in rank to take over the administration of the country after the demise of
General Aguiyi Ironsi. It was the intransigence positions taken by these two
leaders that precipitated the Civil War. I am not a prophet of doom but all
that I am saying is that the appointments so far made by the Mills
administration have the potential of causing disunity and disaffection among
the citizens of the country.
Koku
Anyidoho’s utterances: Kwame, I would like to know
whether you discussed Koku Anyidoho’s statement that he hates ex President’s Kufuor’s’
face more than any other person in Ghana. “I don’t like his face, so I don’t
want to hear anything about him”. Did you condemn him with such a passion as
you and your panel did to me on that day? Did your steer the discussion to a
level where every member of the panel would descend heavily upon him? Which of
the two utterances is negative and capable of cementing the divisions within
the country? My own was to alert the nation to a canker which was gradually
eating away those things that held us together as a nation, whiles Koku’s own
was geared towards hatred for a person who has just relinquished power to his
political opponents.
What
about Koku Anyidoho’s threat to Adomako Baafi? Hear him: “Adomako Baafi, I say
you will not be allowed. We know what you have done and what you are running
away from. And I say Adomako Baafi, you will not be allowed”. Was that a threat
or what and how did you, Kwame, my dear friend and brother do about it? What
about Kwesi Pratt?
Candidate Mills ethnic remarks against then President Kufuor.
Kwame, what did you and Kwesi Pratt do or say when the then candidate Mills
made his infamous declaration that Kufuor didn’t care about the plight of the
fisher folks in the coastal areas because there is no sea in Ashanti Region where
the ex-President comes from? Which statement is more divisive than that? You
allowed such a remark to go unnoticed. You and your panelists did not regard it
as negative and divisive. But today, because I, Daniel Danquah Damptey, an
insignificant fly has drawn the public attention to a dangerous trend which is
factual and capable of affecting our collective existence as one great people
with a common destiny, you deliberately steered the discussion to a point where
Kwesi Pratt was at his best elements. Well, I did not think that was funny
The True
nature of Iku Kwesi Pratt: I will repeat my contention
anywhere, every time that Kwesi Pratt is devious, selfish, unpatriotic, callous
and not trustworthy. To support this fact, let facts be supplied a candid world.
He supported J.J.Rawlings after he had parted ways with the Alliance for
Change. Rumours had it that money had changed hands between the two, but I
cannot say whether this was true or not. But Kwesi, knowing very well where his
bread is buttered parted ways with Rawlings only after the latter started
attacking his newly found love, President Attta Mills. It will interest you to
know that Pratt’s links with the Mills administration was built on the element
of self preservation for that probably enabled him to secure a bank loan with
which he was able to put up a mansion. So anyone who attacks his ‘massa’ will
surely incur his wrath. Do you see his demeanour anytime he criticizes
the Mills administration? Doesn’t that suggest to you that he is not serious
with his criticisms? He always plays to populism. Was he not the person who
spoke on behalf of the CJA that if Mills did not reduce the increase in the
price of petroleum products within ten days, the committee will embark on a
public demonstration? The ten days have since elapsed and what we are hearing
is that, it was Kwesi’s own personal views, not that of the CJA. He smiles in a
sneering and sinister way thus making Caesar’s description of Cassius fit him
very well. Since when has Pratt defended ex-President Kufuor? But the other
day, he was on air, moving from one radio station to the other castigating
ex-President Rawlings for calling ex-President Kufuor names at an international
forum in Germany. He wanted to prove to his newly found friends that any one
who attacks or criticizes his “massa" (President Mills) is an enemy of the
unrepentant Kwesi Pratt.
Now to
the mother of all Revelations: Do you doubt my
contention that Kwesi Pratt is a hypocrite and not a person to be trusted?
Please hold your breath. Go to Ghana web or Ghana review and access”The untold
story of Pratt’s ‘betrayal'. It tells the chilling story of how Kwesi Pratt’s
revelations at Gondar Barracks led to the arrest and torture and incarceration
of his erst-whilefriends, Kweku Baako, Freddie
Blay and Kwasi Agbley. This came from the “horse’s” (WO1 Adjei Boadi) own mouth
at the National Reconciliation Commission. And mind you Warrant Officer Adjei
Boadi was a member of the PNDC regime and he was categorical on his assertion
that Kwesi Pratt was a PNDC informer and a double agent. If after reading, you
have any reservations, you can climb to the highest heavens and proclaim Daniel
Danquah Damptey as the greatest liar that ever walks this narrow and sinful
world of ours. Kwesi is simply dishonest, greedy, selfish, manipulative, and
unpatriotic. There can be no two ways about that!
And by
the way, is it true that his paper, "The Insight" was set up for him
free of charge by Kofi Coomson, publisher of the “Chronicle"?
Conclusion:
The issue of appointments by the President is a
very sensitive issue that we cannot sweep under the carpet. It should not be
regarded as a no-go area under any circumstance. There cannot be any peace
without justice as Rawlings used to say. The NDC made a hell lot of noise about
Kufuor's appointees which included his brother as a Minister. Probably that was
one of the reasons that swept the NPP from power. President Mills does not have
to chart the same course. Already Mills has appointed his twin brother as a
member of his Economic Management Team and to other Boards. When Dr Addo Kufuor
decided to contest the NPP presidential Primaries, I personally led a public
campaign against his decision and had a fierce verbal exchange with his
campaign co-coordinator. I felt at that time that the Kufuor family was not a
ruling dynasty in the country and so he should step aside or shelve his
presidential ambition at least for some time. I also told the people of my town
that it was unfair for the town to be given both the DCE and the MP's slots. My
stance was made public because I believe in the principle of fairness and
natural justice.
In the
same vein, I expect our brethren from the Volta Region to repudiate some of the
Ministerial positions for the sake of peaceful co-existence. Colonel Umar
Abubakar is a Prince from the Hausa-Fulani oligarchy in Nigeria, but he has
been condemning the unfair distribution of the national cake and appointments
in favour of the North and earned the nick-name 'anti-establishment'. This is
what we expect our brothers and sisters from the Volta Region to do.
If we don’t
discuss this issue today, our children and grand children of tomorrow would
insist that the matter be tabled at their time. I repeat my assertion that it
is unfair and against the principle of natural justice and our collective
existence as one people with a common destiny for one ethnic group and region
to be given all the juicy portfolios and more than half of appointments into
public corporations. Other groups have equal stake in the sharing of the
national cake. The President should be told by his advisers and the Council of
State to retrace his steps and do the right thing so as to give a sense of
belongings to all Ghanaians.
We
cannot postpone to tomorrow what we can do for the people of Ghana today. The
issue of giving more appointments to people from one ethnic group and region to
the detriment of all other groups and Regions can no longer be parried away
just like that. We need to discuss it and the time to do so is now!!