A couple of days ago the President inaugurated the redesigned and reconstructed Circle Interchange. It was definitely beautiful at night.
I am happy that traffic at circle will reduce, and if we properly maintain the facility, if we do not allow hawkers to take over, and if we do not allow scrap dealers to steal the metals, then Ghana stands to benefit from the investment.
I don’t know the details of the cost of the construction of the Interchange. I hope our Parliament did a good job of scrutinizing the agreement.
I have heard it being reported that this interchange will save Ghana over $100million annually. I don’t know what went into the calculations, but I know that it will reduce traffic, it will reduce fuel emissions, it will cut down on the traveling time in the city, and it will reduce the cost of doing business in the city.
I have heard the Circle interchange being compared to Dubai. I am not sure if anyone of those who started that comparison has ever travelled to Dubai. I think we should stop embarrassing ourselves in such manners. Sometimes I weep for Ghana.
And I have said it many times, that Ghana is over 500 years behind the West. I know you will dispute this, but I just want to challenge you to take one trip to Europe or America, or even your Dubai, and you will agree with me that poverty of knowledge is what is causing us to rush to follow any pain wrapped in silk.
As I have said, the circle redesign and reconstruction is a good thing, and we will need to commend the government for pursuing it. But to celebrate it in the manner it is being done, is like jubilating upon receiving crumbs from your late father’s maid who inherited all of your father’s properties. It is so sad that we are so poor that even rats have become our delicacies.
America is virtually my second home. I have been to at least 25 states in America, and several of their cities several multiples of times. I have seen very sophisticated interchanges, back-to-back, throughout the country.
And in a lot of instances I have wondered why Ghana, a country of gold, a country of cocoa, a country now of oil, a country with such a fertile land, has become so poor, so poor that anything that looks like yellow is interpreted as gold. We are so encumbered in our nothingness that bread has become the prize for our gold, so much so that we celebrate pains, we celebrate the dying of our brothers if death is what will win us power, why?
Trust me, we are only publicly demonstrating our poverty by the way we are jubilating over this new circle interchange. In Dubai this Nkrumah Interchange will not attract any news. In America it will not receive any media space. Right here on the continent, South Africa, this interchange will not be part of our conversation for the day.
I have watched the NPP enumerating the number of interchanges they also constructed when they were in government. They talked about Ofankor, Tetteh Quarshie, Asokwa, and five other places. These are all the enumeration of our failed shameful list of governance crumbs. In fact, currently in Ghana there is no interchange worth celebrating.
We have celebrated the reconstruction of the Mallam Yamuransa road, Aburi road (both for Kufuor), upgrades of Kumasi and Tamale Airports to international standards (both for Mahama). I listen to the debates, I listen to the pride, and I reel in pain. Why should we become so poor?
Sometimes I wonder which countries we are comparing ourselves with? If we are comparing ourselves with Liberia, Rwanda, and Uganda, then I believe we are doing well. These are countries that have returned from wars. We have never known war. But it is ok if we want to compare ourselves with them, since we, in so doing, would be admitting our failures.
The first time I landed in Dallas airport in Texas I thought this was a city on its own. From my terminal to the next terminal, I had to take a train, within the airport, and I was on that ride for several minutes before I arrived at the next terminal.
The same thing happened to me with my first landing at Chipotle International Airport. For Ghanaians I guess the most popular airports is the Heathrow, and by extension, I guess Terminal 5.
For your information, Heathrow Terminal 5 is mainly a British airways terminal. That terminal alone is several times bigger and sophisticated than a dozen times that of Kotoka International Airport.
The point is this; we should not set our standards so low, we should not behave in ways that will create the impression that it is ok if our children accept mediocrity. We should not allow our children to believe that it is ok if they come third or fourth, no! Our children should know being first is what is required.
This week the United States and the United Kingdom governments have in a separate statements condemned the recent election related violence in Ghana.
These statements, which is obviously inspired by the violence that ensued on the premises of Nana Akufo Addo, also threatened to deny or revoke visas of people who incite political violence in the run up to this years elections.
I wish the US and the UK will rather do the opposite. I wish they will issue all Ghanaians visas, just allow them to visit each of your countries for just two months, let them tour a few places, and show them excellence. Take them to your business and financial hubs.
Take them to some of your airports, and customer service centers. Take them to Beverly Hills. Take them to Irvine. Take them to Norton Park. Take them to Disneyland, and Disneyworld. Let them fly through Heathrow, O’Hare, Texas, LAX, and let them see for themselves how long ago such political primitiveness was abandoned.
I will like to give one example of a wonder bridge in the world, the Golden Gate Bridge. I have used this bridge several times each time I found myself in San Francisco. Wikipidia writes, “The Golden Gate Bridge is a suspension bridge spanning the Golden Gate strait, the one-mile-wide (1.6 km), three-mile-long (4.8 km) channel between San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean. It opened in 1937 and was, until 1964, the longest suspension bridge main span in the world, at 4,200 feet (1,300 m)”.
Do you get the drift? This is not something I am imagining. This is real. I have personally used this bridge several times. This bridge, if we had it in Ghana, I am sure we would have borrowed over ten million US Dollars to draw a program to celebrate it.
The Golden Gate Bridge is reported to be possibly the most beautiful, and the most photographed bridge in the world. Yet by 1964, another bridge had been built to be more miraculous than the celebrated Golden Gate Bridge. This is what we need to, as a country, challenge ourselves with.
So yes, our government has done what it has to do by constructing this facility. But we should not, by our behavior, send a wrong signal out there that this is the best we could ever have had.
Unfortunately we have given our leaders a blank sheet of deceit, and they keep writing their names on it. We have thrown our skulls to them in plain helplessness, and they keep filling them with rots. We have refused to learn, we have refused to educate ourselves, and this has allowed our political leadership the luxury to inviting us to celebrate mediocrity with them.
Anyway, I would have thought that we would have used the rest of the week, after the inauguration of the interchange, to educate the public about how to use the nuances of the facility. I recall the ordeal people went through in trying to navigate the Tetteh Quarshie interchange. Travelers from Madina who were going to Accra Central found themselves onto the Quarshieman highway due to misunderstanding of the architecture of the interchange. A well designed public education strategy, to ensure that users are able to navigate their ways on the highway is what is needed at this point.
Unfortunately the inauguration was preceded by the violent confrontation that happened in front of the resident of Nana Akufo Addo. So our news is now dominated by who caused the problem, the NPP or the NDC? The cabal within have stolen the news, and have made it theirs. What can we do? Nothing!
Source: James Kofi Annan/ email: [email protected]
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At times I get mad when we tend to praise mediocrity.when as a matter of fact the prime beneficiary had since bastadise the act of showcasing developmental projects and social infrastructure to score political points.Now what has changed?
Dear Mr. Annan, when u u visit America do u also visit their ghettos and homeless? Not all of us believe in American and western deceitful and pretentious democracy and character like u do.
Once an European friend of mine who has deeper understanding of African history and people said to me: She thinks most Africans know everything positive about the whiteman and everything negative about themselves. This is a fine article on the surface but I see in the writings of the writer his fascination and adoration of the US and every where that the whiteman lives.Dont get me wrong I want the best for Ghana and Africa and myself I dont understand why government is boasting and people celebratingg about the construction of circle Nkrumah interchange.Ghana today is an eyesore with all the dusty roads and smelly gutters,chaotic traffice and uncoordianted buildingg and city and town planning. But there is a greater need not to celebrate but to recognise the positive and great effort of our leaders and people and rather urge them on to move fast and do more to develop the country and continent. To understand the challenges African leaders face and complexity of their tasks in developing Ghana and Africa you will need to know how to read and understand properly African history in the context of world history and also be in a position to read and decipher racial dynamics especially where its affects and put African and Black people interest and progress in a serious predicament. The US,UK,Canada,Australia,France,Holland etc have been developed by slavery and slave labour.Also by colonialism and colonial exploitation and still by imperialism and unfavourable capilalist markets.To move through all these seemingly unsurmoutable pillars and barriers to develop Ghana and Africa one has to have total conviction,commitment,vision and plan.And anytime we have had such leaders in the persons of Marcus Garvey,Nkrumah,Steve Biko,Mandela,Malcolm X,Martin Luther King,Samora Lumumba,Samora Machel,Sankra and you name them,they are quickly destroyed because they know the truth and how to deal with the truth.Please dont give South African as an example because that is a special case on its own to be discussed in detail and since I am writing a comment I have no space to do that. In short the whiteman has had over 1000 years of free movement without visa,free labour,free capital,free goods and more and still have to develop his white country into what you see today and adoring.These dynamics matters a lot and you need to factor them into your calculation and writings before reaching a conclusion in your assessment of African leadership and progress. So in our modern world since African leaders and countries dont have any land to colonise and rape their resources for Africas development and dont have even free movement within our contiment because we need visas to visit our own neighbours then under normal circustances it should take us over 2000 years to get where the white dreams of the writer.And so if you look at all the challenges facing us and where we have got to just after 50 years of so called independence then Africans and their leaders should be considered as magicians and given a pat on their shoulders.Of course we know we can do more so who says we are resting and taking things for granted? Not long ago Obama visited some African countries including and kind of advised and preached to them not to seek for strong leaders but rather build strong institutions.And yet if you put what Obama came to tell us in the context of BREXIT and the election of a damn racist,braggart,ruffian,undiscipline,***barred word*** a dictator and a man who is anti-everything which is not white donald trump in America,.then you will come to understand that one of the surest way to the salvation and progress of the African people is to do everything opposite what they are told and advised by their so called white friends. Just for your informatiion about 3 years I got what may appear to the uneducated African mind as a great opportunity to visit the US on a trip where evrything was paid for me plus per diem but I refused to travel.I refuse to travel to the US because of its bully and negative politics and its bad treament of my people who are the African-Americans,The Native Americans and the Latinos.
Celebration of mediocrity at its best. I get so irritated when I hear the political fanatics and the government officials try to compare Ghana to the developed world. I wonder if they do so in their right minds. I pity the populist. The only thing they know/understand is what they are told by "their" political masters who are expects in deception and propaganda. We've got a very very long way to go as nation. Enough of the celebration of mediocrity and the international disgrace. K'wusu Connecticut, USA
We have a long way to go. Great piece 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
JUST CAN'T THINK FAR !
Next time pass by the busiest airport in the world "Hartfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport", you will love it. You can ride the concourse train after security check point either from the north or south terminal to the new international concourse called Maynard. Anytime I get to your so called Kotoka "International" I ask myself if we are joking? oooh Ghana, with all the gold, cocoa, oil, and other natural resources, this is all we can do for ourselves? how sad!!!
I must admit back padding ourselves for this bridge (interchange) is like commending a healthy 4 year old child that the child has learned to stand and taken the first step. The commendation is short-lived when we realise this should have happened over 3 years ago. In this case, Ghana is a 59 year old child. So, please lets stop comparing with Dubai. We only draw attention to our failings. For a country with so many modern and high-tech cars, institutions of high learning, it seems our sub-standard roads are the highlight of our achievements. In 2016, construction of a flyover should not be such a big deal. South Africa has a 10 lane highway, 5 in each direction, going into a 6-way flyover. Please!.
I was soo surprised with the way people were making noises about this interchanged, The western world really see us as illiterates. Governance is about making better policies to cater for all, rich or poor, but not to buy the mind of the porpulis. Its a good thing, but its soo funny and shameful. The main problem lies in our mind, we think politics is a tribal battle. For me I don't blame these leaders one bit, I blame the porpulis, we find it soo difficult to change our mind or even judge our leaders based on what they are to do. If we want to grow, we need to grow in our mind. Ghana is bigger than any political party, be it NDC or NPP. Ghana is Ghana
My brother l always read your articles and l wish all Ghanaians could also read. Honestly I get frustrated when I see people behaving this way. I am in Europe and like you said this is celebration of mediocrity. God bless you.