Ghana's President |
Dear Mr. John
Dramani Mahama, I write to you as a concerned citizen of the Republic of Ghana,
of which you are privileged to be the President. I beseech you to kindly take some
few minutes of your time to read this letter, which carries grieving concerns
of many of your northern brothers and sisters back home.
Mr. President, it will interest you to know that of
late many northerners are not enthused a bit about you and your government. The
reason being that life has suddenly become unbearably difficult as a result of rising
prices of basic commodities such as milk, sugar, cereals, beans, gari,
vegetables, utility tariffs, school fees, rent charges and medical bills. For
instance, a small paint container of fresh tomatoes which used to sell at GH¢5.00 is now GH¢10.00
whiles a bowl of gari is selling at GH¢6.00 in the
Tamale market.
You are also aware, that motorbikes are the cheapest
means of transportation in northern Ghana. But, many citizens detest it whenever
there is artificial fuel shortage or periodic increase in fuel prices which usually
trigger increases in utility tariffs and prices of food. Following the
nationwide fuel shortage, a gallon of petrol in Bole now is about GH¢45.00, Tamale GH¢25.00
whereas in Bolga a beer bottle of petrol is also GH¢10.00. A tractor service for an acre of farm has
increased from GH¢30.00 in 2013 to about GH¢60.00 in 2014 as a result of high cost of fuel and spare
parts. The farming season has just begun but not all farmers can afford tractor
services.
Also, as at the beginning of this year, a motorbike
with clutch was sold between GH¢2,000.00 and GH¢2,500.00 whiles a clutchless motorbike was between GH¢1,500.00 and GH¢2,000.00. A
few months down the line, a motorbike with clutch is sold between GH¢3,000.00 and GH¢5,000.00
whereas a clutchless motorbike goes for GH¢2,500.00.
This is Tamale where motorbikes dominate cars |
Moreover, even before polytechnic teachers return to
the classroom from their protracted strike, there are fresh reports that another
35,000 trainee nurses and midwives have embarked on strike because they have
not been paid their allowances for several months. The Christian Health
Association of Ghana has also directed over 180 of its members nationwide to turn
away clients with health insurance because your government owes them. This
further compounds effort by government to reduce maternal and infant mortality
rates which are the highest in northern Ghana.
Mr. President, currently in Tamale where I reside, you
will be amazed and shocked to know that people just hate to hear your name being
mentioned while others mention your name with such disdain at the least
provocation. I am sure every misfortune in one’s life now is blamed on you. Incidentally,
this is supposed to be one of the strongholds of your political party where you
garnered more votes in the disputed 2012 elections to win the presidential bid.
Subjectively, the only persons who appear to be happy
with you and your government are those who are closer to you and get to eat
well. Often times, they are those who shout loudest during radio and television
discussions on murky issues in your government. They will defend every decision
you take no matter how economically unfavourable it will be to the majority of
us Ghanaians whose suggestions you will not get to hear.
Mr. President, you are very familiar with the economic
conditions in the north than any of your predecessors because you grew up here.
You are aware that a greater majority of citizens of the Upper West, Upper East
and Northern Regions live on less than a dollar a day. As president of this
country, when you watch millions of the tax payers’ money being mismanaged by
state agencies such as GYEEDA, SADA, to mention just a few, whiles penury
continues to stare you in the face each time you visit the north, how do you
feel as a northerner yourself?
You have been in politics for long and thus have the experience
to take citizens of this country to the land of opportunities no matter the
difficulties and challenges that come your way. Unfortunately, since the
inception of your government up till date, many of us northerners have completely
lost hope because we are not sure of the future. Corruption did not start in
your regime, but it has been popularized and glorified by some of your appointees
and their cronies. Mr. President, how then do you complain when the blame is
heaped on you because you refuse to take drastic action against an appointee
who is accused of corruption? Seriously, northerners will find it hard to
forgive you since you are the reason why we are being insulted by others.
Enough of the abrob3 nsuo; we want action |
I am a Christian just like many Ghanaians and many northerners.
My religion teaches me to pray for leaders such as the president, chiefs, government
ministers, legislators, district chief executives, pastors and all those who
take major decisions on behalf of the majority. It is citizens’ obligation to
pray for their leaders for God’s protection, guidance and direction in order
that they (leaders) may take wise decisions even if they are faced with
opposition within and outside their government or organisation. I doubt if
there is anything contrary to this in Islam. However, Mr. President, it appears
God has done his part but you have just decided on your own or may be through
bad counsel from others who do not care, to bring hardship upon Ghanaians and
for that matter already suffering northerners who are yet to reap any benefits
from the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority (SADA).
Truth be told, you know that northern Ghana is one of
the cheapest places to live. A woman in Savelugu or Lawra district can trade
with GH¢50.00 and be able to take care of her family members. But
sadly, Mr. President it is now extremely difficult if not impossible, for many
women in Northern Ghana to come by GH¢50.00 or
more to invest in Kulikuli and shea butter processing or pito brewing business.
The salary of each of your ministers which is reported to hover around GH¢9,000.00 including other per diems as at 2013 can be a
startup capital for about 180 women in Nandom-Piiri where I come from.
Picture of woman frying kulikuli (groundnut chips) |
Mr. President, I know that human as you are, you are
fallible and despite your fallibility, you can repent by judiciously using our
resources entrusted in your care, and also take stern actions against any of
your appointees who misapply state resources. A classic example is the manner
in which the outgoing Minister of Youth and Sports Elvis Afriyie Ankrah is
reported to have used resources during the ongoing 2014 World Cup. Kofi Humado,
also a former Youth and Sports Minister and currently Minister for Agric is
another example. He allegedly supervised the signing of contracts between the
government and Zoomlion and other private companies in his former post and they
later turned out to be bad contracts. Every right thinking Ghanaian is calling
for their heads but ironically, only you Mr. President, still finds it prudent
to reassign each of them.
The gripe among many northerners now is that, “John
Mahama is spoiling the chances of other more competent northern politicians who
are in the queue to contest for president in future”. Mr. President, have you suddenly
forgotten of the smeared campaign that your opponents used against you in 2012?
Our sages of old have a saying that “He who has been bitten by a snake before
runs away each time he sees an earthworm”.
Ghana is an oil producing country. we don't want this! |
Going forward, I will like to suggest that the
thousands of farmers back home are waiting for you to address the problem of
expensive tractor services so that they will be able to farm this year and not be
consumed by hunger at the end of the season. In addition to this, they wish
that the annual fertiliser subsidy programme will be implemented early enough in
order not to cause any crop failure like it happened to many farmers last year.
Mr. President, you will also have to discontinue with
social intervention programmes such as school feeding programme, free school
uniforms, free shoes to pupils and the now infamous free sanitary pad for girls
in basic schools. Please, you are making a lot of parents lazy and excuse me to
say, irresponsible. You can pass a law that will force every parent to send
their children to school instead of using food to entice them to go to school. What
northerners want from your government is empowerment. We want your government
to make available more tractors, irrigation facilities and tarred roads and
electricity linking farming communities. When this is done for us and we farm
and transport produce to the market for sale, we can afford school uniforms,
sandals/boots, nutritious meals, exotic sanitary pads and learning materials
for our school boys and girls.
There is also an urgent need for you Mr. President to
compel any of your appointees who finds himself or herself in any kind of
corruption allegation to resign immediately and allow investigations to be
conducted. This is what Ghanaians want from you and not you reassigning the
person simply because he has been good to you in the past, otherwise you allow many
people to think that you and that person are partners in crime.
Mr. President, there is also an urgent need for the
problem of fuel shortage currently in the country to be addressed with without
further delay. Ghanaians and for that matter northerners deserve better. If
subsidy is the cause of government’s indebtedness to the Bulk Distribution
Companies, then scrap the policy because after all those who are supposed to
benefit from it are not benefiting.
Finally Mr. President, your government ought to cut
down on excessive borrowing. I understand the country’s domestic debt is more
than our external debt or is it the other way round. Whichever way it is, that
is too bad. Please prioritise what you intend to do in your first and perhaps
last term, and collect more taxes from foreign companies that are enjoying tax
holidays. Widen the tax net to capture many of the untaxed in the informal
sector of the economy. Also block all loopholes in places where taxes are
collected and punish those who attempt to fleece the state.
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