On Wednesday, a Deputy Minister of Information, James Agyenim-Boateng,
insulted Ghanaian taxi drivers.
Speaking on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show, the young deputy Minister,
said unlike the Kufuor government, the Mills-Mahama administration has not
appointed taxi drivers to manage the nation’s affairs.
The New Patriotic Party is calling on the President to act on his words this
time and reprimand the Deputy Minister for these unwarranted insults to
Ghanaian taxi drivers.
It is just another example of the arrogance of power that the ruling NDC,
under its see-no-evil, hear-no-evil-by-my-people President John Evans Atta
Mills.
It is this same arrogance that had another deputy minister insulting
Ghanaians in cocoa-growing areas as primitive and uncultured. Yet, it is the
labour and fruit of these same cocoa farmers that have educated millions of
Ghanaians from colonial days and continue to do so. The least President
Mills and his people can do is to respect them. They do not deserve to be
insulted by the appointees of the President of the Republic.
Is it not ironic that the NDC, which calls itself social democrats and have
spent propaganda time and energy falsely describing the NPP as elitist,
should now, in power, turn around and criticize the NPP for appointing taxi
drivers as government officials.
The NPP believes in building a society of opportunities for all. We believe
that with education come opportunities, that is why we are committed to
making sure that the potential of every Ghanaian child, regardless of his or
her circumstances of birth, should be assisted and encouraged to blossom.
Indeed, many Ghanaians, both at home and abroad, who did not have the
opportunity or privilege to climb the academic ladder through uninterrupted
education, for one reason or the other, do go on to combine work with
education and they must be encouraged.
They may sell on the streets of Accra, clean offices in London, serve as
security guards in Amsterdam, work as factory hand in Hamburg, or drive
taxis in New York. But, they so with one eye on improving themselves so that
they may one day rise to the top of the social ladder.
Some have risen to become Cabinet Ministers and we are happy to have
facilitated that and we hope that will encourage more and more Ghanaians to
see education, including adult education, as not time-bound. Ghanaians
should also know that in the NPP you can be a taxi driver and still rise to
the top.
Everyday sees the NDC exposing itself as a hypocritical, deceptive and
dishonest team of incompetent people who have lied their way to office and
their way of paying Ghanaians back is to insult them.
It has gotten so bad that young people, who until 2009, had never held a
full time permanent job, lack experience, but are now government officials
feel so superior to the people they are supposed to serve that they can now
insult Ghanaians who are struggling to make ends meet and better their
lives.
After insulting the nation that the Mills-Mahama administration has created
1.6 million ghost jobs, government officials have gone a step further by
insulting hardworking Ghanaians.
If all that Government can do is to increase the burden on commercial
drivers by increasing fuel prices, we are asking them to not add insults to
injuries by insulting commercial drivers on top of that.
There are several taxi drivers, in Ghana and abroad, who are educating
themselves further or are already good enough to also wear a tie and coat
like the Agyenim-Boatengs of the Mills-Mahama government. What is
Government’s message to them? That they should also begin raining insults
because that is the only way that they can be noticed by Professor Mills to
be considered good enough for an appointment?
Some people do the work they do because of the circumstances they find
themselves in. Some are proud of the work they do and they all contribute to
building a nation. Let us not degrade and insult them.
Agyenim-Boateng must be ashamed of himself. There are government officials,
including Ministers of State, who are rather using their period in office,
while being paid by taxpayers, to further their education. If the Ghanaian
people are not complaining about that then the least such government
officials should do is not to insult those who have chosen to educate
themselves before any future appointment.
Those who decide to prepare themselves before they are offered appointments
should be encouraged rather than insulted. We should not encourage them to
learn from a government that has been characterized by incompetence, lies
and arrogance.
Agyenim-Boateng should apologise to all Ghanaian taxi drivers for raining
such strong unprovoked attack on them. We will urge Ghanaians, including
taxi drivers, to go on working hard and that there is a brighter future
ahead of them after 2012.
Signed
Jake Otanka Obetsebi-Lamptey
National Chairman, NPP