Ghana: Africa's Rising Star

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Ghana: Africa's Rising

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Ghana: Africa's Rising Star</font size>
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A peaceful and well-conducted national election bodes well
for democracy in Ghana and the rest of Africa</font size></center>


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by Laura Brunts
DECEMBER 17, 2008


<font size="6">E</font size>lections are intensely public events in Africa in a way that they rarely are in the U.S. (except, perhaps, the street celebrations in several American cities following Obama’s recent victory). Take Ghana’s December 7 presidential contest: Because few Ghanaians have TVs in their homes, large groups gathered to wait for results around radios and televisions, or, more often, outside the polling stations where votes were being counted. Pictures published last week by the BBC reminded me of the clogged streets that I walked through on the country’s 50th birthday in March 2007, when boys in full-body paint in the design of the Ghanaian flag danced in the streets. Last week, men with party slogans on their chests did the same. Such crowds help explain some of the anxiety about electoral violence in Africa, but those in Ghana have been peaceful.

The presidential race on December 7 was so close that it is, in fact, not yet over. Since neither of the two leading presidential candidates won more than 50 percent of the vote (six other candidates also competed), the electoral commission will hold a run-off Dec. 28 between the ruling New Patriotic Party’s Nana Akufo-Addo, who won 49.3 percent of the vote, and John Atta Mills of the opposition party, National Democratic Congress, who took 47.8 percent. But the clean, credible, and peaceful nature of this election may be more important than the winner, and it bodes well for Ghana and the continent as a whole.

Online media reports from Ghana on election day would sound rather familiar to American voters: Ghanaians stood patiently in long lines, exit polls were too close to call, and people waited anxiously for results to come in. In fact in many ways Ghana’s political culture is healthier than America’s. A regional observer group estimated voter turnout this year at 70 percent. Dozens of radio stations and independent newspapers create a diverse and lively media environment, and average Ghanaians are quite vocal about politics. During the tumultuous Nigerian election in April 2007, I was studying at a small college in Accra, and endured political harangues from my fellow students, taxi drivers, and the occasional passerby.

Ghana lacks many of the problems that keep other African countries in the international news. Though certain Ghanaian politicians occasionally appeal to ethnic identity, ethnicity and political constituencies are not fused the way they are in countries like Kenya and Nigeria that have seen such violent bouts of electoral conflict. In a phenomenon known as “skirt and blouse” voting, some regions voted against candidates of their own ethnicity this year. Until recently Ghana has also avoided the high-stakes politics of oil – one iteration of the “resource curse” that afflicts parts of the continent. But many Ghanaians and outside observers have worried that the discovery of oil off the west coast last year would raise the stakes of this year’s election and increase the incentive to cheat or incite violence. The new administration will get to decide how to spend oil revenues which may materialize as early as 2010. So it is encouraging that things have gone as smoothly as they have so far.

With the departure of two-term President John Kufuor, this election marks the second time that power at the national level has changed hands democratically (the first was eight years ago when Kufuor and the NPP defeated the would-be successor of dictator-turned-democrat Lt. Jerry Rawlings). Some political science scholars consider this event the defining threshold for “democratic consolidation,” or the point at which all stakeholders accept democratic methods as the only legitimate path to power.

This is good news for Ghana, of course, but also for the rest of Africa. Ghana has been a poster country for stability and economic growth for several years, and the commendable handling of this high-stakes, high-profile election reinforces that image. This success story of African democracy stands in contrast to the string of deeply flawed elections in Nigeria, Kenya and Zimbabwe, and it could prompt an influx of aid and investment to other African countries. The existence of a stable Anglophone country (i.e. a potential ally) in an oil-rich and volatile region is also a clear plus for the United States, which, judging from the size of the new American embassy complex that I saw under construction in Accra, recognizes its strategic importance.

Of course, violence following the December 28 run-off could undo this election’s stabilizing effect, but I’m hopeful that this won’t happen. NDC supporters, who make up the majority in some of Accra’s biggest slums, are probably the group more likely to riot if their candidate loses; their party, however, won a narrow majority in parliament, which may temper the disappointment. Regardless of who wins, the closely divided parliament will be a challenge to the new president. For one thing, it means that both parties will have some say over the spending of any newfound oil revenues, a decision process that may ultimately provide the sternest test to date of Ghana’s democracy and the hopes that it embodies for Africa’s future.



http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200812u/ghana
 
Re: Ghana: Africa's Rising

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Ghana's glee </font size>
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That Egypt stopover does not count as a trip to Africa.
He is coming to Ghana because, to borrow the words
of his spokesperson: "Ghana is a truly admirable
example of a place where governance is
getting stronger, a thriving democracy."

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Africans reflect on Obama's
'tough love' message</font size>
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The president used his first African visit – to the
democratic bastion of Ghana – to signal a harder-line
US approach to dealing with corrupt African leaders. </font size></center>


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Ghanaians crowded a refrigerator shop Saturday to
watch President Obama's meeting with Ghanaian
President John Atta Mills on television. Rebecca
Blackwell/AP


The Christian Science Monitor
By Drew Hinshaw, Contributor
from the July 12, 2009 edition


Accra, Ghana - President Obama's international tour, which ended Sunday, raised a question that will rattle in the minds of Africans for some time: Do African leaders have more to fear from America's first black president than they have to gain?

Mr. Obama, a popular hero to the continent, enjoys at least surface adoration of its leaders, too. Politicians in South Africa, Ghana, Kenya, and elsewhere have positioned themselves as allies, friends, and kindred spirits to the US president. Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, a vehemently anti-Western autocrat, even offered to meet with Obama.

Yet the president used his first African visit – to the democratic bastion of Ghana – to send a critical message to Africa's leaders: It's time for the corrupt old ways to end. The "tough love" message is one that Obama is uniquely qualified to deliver, and it signals a new, harder-line US strategy that may ruffle some feathers.

"Africans are very delighted to have a [US] president with African roots, but you should be careful of what you want, because an American president with African roots can be much more severe than a white president ever could," says Steven Ekovich, a policy analyst at the American University in Paris. "He can give them tough love, just as Obama can be tougher on African-Americans at home."


<font size="4">'Africa doesn't need strongmen'</font size>

In Italy this past week, the president reportedly asked a panel of African heads-of-state why his cousins in Kenya had to pay bribes to find a job. In Ghana, he called for weaker executives and stronger legislative bodies on the continent.

"No person wants to live in a society where the rule of law gives way to the rule of brutality and bribery. That is not democracy, that is tyranny, and now is the time for it to end," Obama said, adding: "Africa doesn't need strongmen, it needs strong institutions."

Even before his presidency, as senator visiting Kenya in 2006, he confronted Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki about why Chicago TV crews had to pay substantial bribes to clear customs at Kenya's international airport, and made a public, in-country address on corruption.


<font size="4">'Tough love' message hits its mark</font size>

His Saturday trip to Ghana, analysts say, further revealed what may become a staple tactic in the president's Africa strategy: tough love.

Certainly the message hit its mark in Nigeria, a country notorious for rigged elections and pervasive corruption.

"For us in Nigeria, Obama's visit to Ghana should be a cause for sober reflection," wrote Nigerian movie star Ayo Badmus in a newspaper editorial. "Unfortunately, sobriety is not a strong suit of Nigeria's political elite."

In Kenya, the nation's largest paper acknowledged widespread disappointment with Obama's trip to Ghana, instead of the homeland of his father. It said the choice was interpreted as "a sign of [Obama's] disapproval over the slow pace of reforms."


<font size="4">Even in model Ghana, pangs of embarrassment</font size>

But the message resonated in Ghana, too, where the opportunity to host the president in lieu of Africa's less democratic states has been a boost to national pride.

"It was splendid," says Nana Anane, an aspiring Ghanaian journalist. "He has shown that he wouldn't support any untoward conduct by any African leader."

Even in Ghana however, some of Obama's comments triggered pangs of embarrassment. During his speech to parliament, the president said that history was "not with those who use coups or constitutions to stay in power" in front of a hall full of dignitaries, many of whom rode into leadership on the backs of military coups.

His condemnation of Africa's drug trade, and of the corrupt police officers that enable it, echoed loudly in this transit hub for cocaine, where several high-ranking politicians have been indicted for drug trafficking.

"I think the main thing he wanted to do was to put the Africans on notice that its time to stop complaining about their problems as emanating from outside, and to realize that for the most part, their problems are of their own making now," says David Shinn, former US Ambassador to Ethiopia. "I think it came across loud and clear."


http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0712/p06s04-woaf.html
 

Ghana president John Atta Mills
dies suddenly aged 68​


John Atta Mills, the president of the gold, oil and cocoa-rich West African
country of Ghana, has died suddenly from an unspecified illness.


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Ghanaian President John Atta Mills



Mr Mills, 68, who came to power in 2009 and was widely-respected for being a steady hand in a volatile region, died just hours after being taken ill, the presidency said in a statement.

"It is with a heavy heart that we announce the sudden and untimely death of the president of the republic of Ghana," it said.

A presidential aide, who asked not to be named, said that the president had complained of pains on Monday evening and died early on Tuesday afternoon when his condition worsened.

Mr Mills is known to have suffered from ill health in the past, having made several trips abroad for treatment.

Ghana, a former British colony known as the Gold Coast, was the first African country to gain independence from a European power, in 1957.


SOURCE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...nt-John-Atta-Mills-dies-suddenly-aged-68.html





 
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DEMOCRACY IN BLACK



The new President:
"I wish Ghanaians to be assured that all is well." "We are going
to maintain the peace, unity and stability that Ghana is noted for."


The Political Opposition:
The swift transition to the new President, showed Ghana was a mature
democracy. "Ghana actually has handled itself very well. We have never
been through this before," "Yet the transition that we saw in parliament
has been very well handled, very smooth. We are showing a maturity
that must encourage all Ghanaians."





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Newly Oil-Rich Ghana Struggles to Please

Newly Oil-Rich Ghana Struggles to Please
Reuters
April 09, 2013

When Ghana struck oil in 2007, citizens expected the industry would bring them better lives and investors anticipated hefty profits from a rising African economic star.

Six years later, all of them are complaining.

Lower-than-expected production from the offshore Jubilee field and funding a costly presidential election process in 2012 have left the West African nation struggling to deliver promised development projects while keeping its finances in order.

The situation underscores the complex reality of translating raw materials into prosperity on a continent notorious for the 'resource curse'' of graft, strife and mismanagement that has hit oil-rich countries like Nigeria, Angola and Equatorial Guinea.

Newly-elected President John Dramani Mahama is walking a fiscal tightrope between ordinary Ghanaians demanding swift change and investors alarmed by the country's ballooning debt.

A stumble could prove politically costly for Mahama and
financially disastrous for Ghana as it seeks to retain its access to credit to fund rapid growth.

"Because of oil production, rising expectations in Ghana
will have to be met. But at the same time, past policy choices constrain the room for maneuver and Ghana is toeing a very delicate line,'' said Razia Khan, Africa analyst at Standard Chartered Bank in London.

Eschewing the deepest of cuts, Ghana's 2013 budget plotted a middle-of-the road route intended to trim the deficit while using increased revenues to fund a jump in public spending.

Last month, Finance Minister Seth Terkper unveiled plans to pare the government's deficit to 9 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) this year from 12.1 percent in 2012, while cranking up expenditures by 20 percent.

That disappointed economists who were expecting Ghana to reaffirm its commitment to a deficit of 6 percent of GDP - the target it set and then widely missed in 2012.

Rating agency Fitch had already downgraded the outlook for Ghana's credit rating to negative from stable in February after details emerged of deteriorating public finances, a blow to its reputation as a model of African potential.

Total public debt rose by more than a fifth last year to
$18.8 billion, versus $15.3 billion in 2011.

Studying under trees

Rare in a region where coups, civil wars, disputed elections and strong-arm rulers are the norm, Ghana has distinguished itself with six peaceful transfers of power via the ballot box.

That reputation allowed it to launch a $750-million eurobond in 2007 and helped it secure the accolade of hosting Barack Obama for his first African trip as U.S. president in 2009.

Across the capital Accra, evidence of new resource wealth abounds: brightly-lit multi-storey buildings, cranes looming over construction sites, well-paved roads and billboards advertising banks, cars and mobile phones.

But many Ghanaians remain excluded. An influx of rural
workers hoping for jobs in Accra, has spawned a sprawl of outlying shanty towns and spilled vendors across the streets.

Standing in a trash-strewn courtyard, 49-year-old school teacher Monica Quansah wonders where the oil money is going.

"Our children are still attending school under trees,'' she said. "Those of us in the city don't have reliable power and water, let alone those in the regions.''

Grace Asantewaa, who voiced hope three years ago that oil would improve people's lives, said she had yet to see any benefit.

"Nothing has changed. We are even worse off than before because prices have shot up significantly,'' she said behind her stall of tomatoes and chilli peppers at the teeming Agbogbloshie market along a potholed road in the seaside capital.

Mahama won the presidency in December by tapping into public frustration at the slow pace of change for ordinary Ghanaians.

Among other things, he promised to build 200 new school blocks within his first four years, bolster crumbling water and power infrastructure, pave roads outside Accra and sustain economic growth at 8 percent or more.

But he was dealt a tough hand.

Technical hitches meant Tullow Oil's Jubilee field, 80 km (50 miles) offshore and the prime engine for revenue growth, produced 72,000 barrels per day in 2012, well shy of a 90,000 bpd target.

A report last month showed Ghana received $540 million from the oil industry last year, far short of a projected $774 million. About $32 million of that was saved in Ghana's two-year-old sovereign wealth fund, which was valued at about $72 million at the end of 2012.

Nigeria's oil-fed sovereign wealth fund, by comparison, is worth about $1 billion.

A public pay hike and election spending after the sudden death of President John Atta Mills in July further squeezed finances. Simply organizing the voting last year cost $125 million - over one percent of planned annual public spending.

Ghana has missed its budget deficit target in every election year since constitutional rule was restored in 1992. Vice President Kwesi Amissah-Arthur said the government chose slow fiscal consolidation to balance growth and stability.

"An attempt to correct the fiscal imbalance in one year
would be extreme,'' he said. "We'd be putting the brakes on at a time when we also have the responsibility to ensure economic growth to create employment opportunities for our people.''

The West African country ranked among Africa's fastest growing economies in 2011 and attained a lower middle-income status, propelled by the 2010 start up of oil production.

With reserves of 800 million barrels of high-quality oil and potential for at least one billion more, the field makes Ghana one of sub-Saharan Africa's top 10 oil producers. Tullow hopes to produce 120,000 bpd this year and 200,000 bpd by 2015.

Tough decisions

Despite the budgeted spending jump, Ghana will struggle to fulfil the social projects planned this year, said Amissah-Arthur, who also chairs Ghana's economic management committee.

"It means we could only be providing one or two of those school blocks this year and that's not good enough,'' he said, adding the government was seeking private sector investment.

Ghana is also grappling with power and water infrastructure problems that authorities say will require hundreds of millions of dollars to fix. Payments to private-sector healthcare providers and some public-sector workers are also in arrears.

Joe Abbey, economist at the Accra-based Center for Policy Analysis, said the government must prioritize.

"There are verifiable deficiencies in our infrastructure.
The most critical one is energy,'' he said. "It's a huge problem because every economic activity depends on reliable energy.''

In an ironic twist to the nation's status as an oil
producer, Ghanaian power utility, Volta River Authority, has been rationing power since September because it lacks the money to buy light crude after a subsea pipeline was damaged.

Ghana is hoping to start producing its own natural gas to generate power by year-end, but until then residents will have to bear power cuts lasting 12 hours every other day.

In a sign the government is feeling the financial pressure, Mahama's administration slashed fuel subsidies in February, resulting in a 20-percent rise in prices at the pump.

"We must learn to cut our coat to fit out cloth,'' said Bruce Ayiku, a 53 year-old physician. "There's too much extravagance around government machinery of late.''

http://www.voanews.com/content/newly-oil-rich-ghana-struggles-to-please/1637947.html
 
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