Can The School-Block Teach Students?...Nunoo-Mensah�s Remarks �Totally Uncalled For�

General Secretary of the People's National Convention (PNC), Bernard Mornah has expressed disgust over the comments by the National Security Advisor that the salaries of striking public sector workers in the country should be suspended. Brigadier General Nunoo-Mensah, addressing the issue of industrial actions on the labour front, told them to pick up their passports and leave the country if they cannot cope with the current economic situation. He also blurted out that the workers who cannot withstand the "kitchen heat" should "get out" because "Ghana is not a Police State." But speaking on Peace FM, Bernard Mornah decried such remarks, stating emphatically that government should resolve the conflict on the labour front so as to end the threatening strike actions by workers in the nation. �I don�t think for what you cannot afford. If government indeed did these negotiations with the workers, then they have a claim that, look, what we have already discussed with you; you have to pay and if you�re not paying, then it must not be that we should pick our passport and walk out of this country. That cannot be,� he said. He further questioned the logic in the comments made by the National Security Advisor, saying �it didn�t matter whether you�re contributing, that you�re helping to enhance people�s acceptability or acceptance into education. But the school that you�ve helped put up, if the teachers don�t go and pick up their passports and leave (the country); will the classroom teach the students? Will the school block teach the students? Or we�re going to return to those days where we sacked teachers and bring in military men to come and teach; and teach what?� He therefore found it distasteful for him (Brigadier Nunoo-Mensah) to posit that Ghanaian workers should leave their country in the wake of the economic pressures confronting the labour front. �This is our country. We have to live and tell our government that things are not well. And it�s the responsibility of government to make things better for us. So, I think that the statement by General Nunoo-Mensah was totally uncalled-for," he insisted.