Presidential Commission To Divert Attention And Shift Blame?

THE 3-Member Presidential Commission set up to investigate the appearance of the Black Stars at the 2014 Brazil World Cup is about to commence its work but impeccable information picked from the corridors of power is that the Commission is to fulfill two main roles; to divert attention from the pressing issues of the economy and to shift blame from government appointees who played various roles in delaying payments due to the Black Stars players and who also mismanaged the issue of supporters who were airlifted to the Latin American country to cheer the Stars. According to signals picked from the seat of government, President John Mahama who immediately after the Black Stars elimination tasked the GFA to form a committee on their own to fact find and draw valuable lessons from the Brazil experience, was prevailed upon to rather ask for a Ministerial Committee and later a Presidential Commission to provide a means to divert the attention of Ghanaians. With football seen as a passion of the nation, the information has it that government Communication experts and operators are confident that a publicly telecast Commission of Enquiry into anything related to the game, would provide an appropriate avenue to redirect the minds of Ghanaians from the current economic malaise the country finds itself in. Again, the Presidential commission is seen as the appropriate way of shifting the blame from the Ministry of Sports particularly and other government appointees who supervised the mishaps which ensured that unlike 2006 and 2010, the players had to agitate for several days before their money was delivered to them after they threatened to boycott games at the World Cup. The blame for the poor performance of the Stars will therefore be conveniently dumped on the GFA, the technical team and the playing body by the commission. The spinoffs from the Commission is also expected to provide the launch pad for a major attack on the GFA President which is expected to lead to his eventual resignation or sacking as GFA Boss as he is clearly not in the good books of many people both within and without the government who have not hidden their sentiments about the FA Presidency. The setting up of the Presidential Commission has in the past few days brought up numerous discussions beginning with an Executive face off with the Legislature which wanted to set up a bi-partisan committee of enquiry and which was thought could have done a much more in-depth and objective job than a Presidential Committee which is being set up by the same persons who might have something to hide in the whole fracas concerning the world cup appearance. Other eminent football administrators have all questioned the rationale behind the setting up of the Commission. Kofi Manu, popularly known as Blue Blue, a football administrator is on record to have questioned the propriety in setting up the Commission.