Remaking of Ghana

Published on 15th May 2007

Mr. Bernard Guri’s name smacks of an obscure outfit with a big heart. Despite the small nature of his Centre for Indigenous Knowledge and Organizational Development in Ghana, Guri, the Executive Director, has touched on something big, unaware of its huge implications for the remaking of Ghana.

Guri is quoted by the Ghana News Agency (May 4, 2007) as saying that “research had shown that over 75 per cent of Ghanaians were still dependent on their traditional authorities for governance and social organization.” Guri has opened the logic of illogicality in Ghana’s development process. If 75 per cent of Ghanaians use traditional political institutions for their governance and social organization, then it is logical that these traditional institutions should first inform their democratic governance. Despite this reality and clear logic, the Ghana nation-state, as a development project, is not governed in this sense, thus making the Ghana nation-state an absurd venture. According to Guri, the logical way to develop Ghana is simple: Ghanaian/African indigenous norms, values and traditions mixed in proportion with the dominant neo-liberal values are equal to the mechanisms for the progress of Ghana.

The reason is not far-fetched. Ghanaian political elites, who should have known better, continue with ex-colonial British values, ignoring Ghanaian/African values. Ignoring our indigenous resource base means ignoring the largest part of the potential for the development of the people. This is partly responsible for most of Ghana’s developmental troubles.

Guri doesn’t blame the ex-colonialists too much but pretty much the post-independent Ghanaian elites, who appear not to have thought seriously about the Ghana nation-state before venturing to take over from the British. Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana’s first President, despite being touted as “leading Pan-Africanist,” “visionary” and “big brain,” is on record as having spent ten years in attempting to 'crush' indigenous Ghanaian chieftaincy system in the larger scheme of Ghana’s progress. By this token, Nkrumah immensely undermined Ghana’s long-term progress by attempting to destroy its frontline indigenous institutions. Luckily for Ghana’s progress, incumbent President John Kufour appears to be correcting this enormous developmental gap, by supporting traditional authority by establishing the Ministry of Chieftaincy and Cultural Affairs and collaborating with external institutions such as the World Bank.

No doubt, in the 1980s and a good part of the 1990s, as the African nation-states face severe crises and appear to be crumbling because of the schism between ex-colonial legacies and African indigenous values, the London, UK-based African Confidential newsletter (January 6, 1995) explains that “There are signs everywhere that the era of the nation-state is fading and nowhere is this clearer than in Africa, where its roots are shallowest. The awkward marriage of the ‘nation’ in the sense of an ethnic coalition and the ‘state’ as the principal source of political authority is coming under pressure from above and below.” The fact is, the roots of African nation-state are not shallow, for it stands firmly in African values. What is shallowest is the “state,” as ex-colonial creation, not skillfully and properly rooted in the “nation” as a development project.

While such defects in the construction of the African nation-state may be true, the facts on the ground, as Guri partially indicates, is that Africa’s political elites and governments have not worked “to strengthen the capacities of traditional authorities by making resources available to them as a foundation for sustainable development.” What Guri is saying is that to contain the nation-state from fading, African nation-states should go the Southeast Asian way by mixing its ex-colonial legacies with its indigenous values in the greater development process of Africa. As Ghana’s Dr. Y.K. Amoako has observed, Africa is the only region in the world whose development process is dominated by foreign development paradigms to the detriment of its rich values for progress.  

As international development opens itself up and attempts to correct many an error of yesteryears, many of them are helping to bring the long-suppressed traditional institutions openly and strategically into Africa’s development process. Apart from the German-sponsored forum that Guri spoke in the northern part of Ghana, the World Bank, one of the key faces of Western development paradigms that have for long not factored in African indigenous values in its policy-making, is currently correcting this historical mistake by appropriating Ghanaian/African traditional institutions in its programs. This is what Guri is saying: development agents – local, national or international – should sufficiently consider Ghanaian/African traditional institutions in their planning for the sustainable development of Ghana.


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