Opinions of Friday, 5 May 2006

Columnist: Ofosu-Appiah, Ben

Today?s Politicians Live in a Cocoon of Privileges.

It would be nice if our politicians will park their government allocated cars a few days a month and take tro-tro to work. My political friends roll their eyes when I make such outlandish suggestions. A few, thinking I might be serious, point out no African politician will behave in such a humble way. Political power makes all of them arrogant and greedy in an undignified way.

I think some way has to be found to get our political leaders out of their privileged cocoons. It troubles me that those we elect rapidly become lords over us and isolated from the concerns of ordinary Ghanaians. Their primary objective becomes stealing from the national coffers to amass wealth and acquire properties. They start putting up multiple houses in a year, acquiring hotels in the name of their children, depositing billions of cedis in their personal accounts in a matter of months, transferring hundreds of thousands of dollars from Ghana Airways to their fianc?s abroad, drawing various sums of dollars for per diem on their numerous useless foreign trips which brings the nation no tangible benefits.

They are driven around in convoys sometimes running over and killing our children without any sense of remorse, they are whisked past poor neighbourhoods with a retinue of guards to keep ?strangers? at bay. They behave like animals chasing Legon girls, under aged SSS girls, and even married women as if they live in the jungle with the law of the jungle in operation. Those in government react with angry disbelief when accused by the people that their greed is hurting the poor. They think they have to increase the price of petrol to recoup the cost but they themselves continue to draw free petrol everyday of the week. They use government vehicles for private purposes and they see absolutely nothing wrong with that. They live in government houses rent free while they rent their own houses to foreigners for hard currency (US $). They don?t pay for utilities, they enjoy free electricity, free water, free gas, and free telephone services. If you care to check their phone bills and the numbers they call in a month, you will be shocked to find the percentage of the cost and the calls that have nothing to do with transacting government business. It will amaze you to find the number of calls they made to girl friends, and to friends abroad all for the poor Ghanaian tax payer to pay.

So our politicians enjoy free housing, free car with free petrol, free electricity, free water, free telephone service etc, so you are tempted to ask what do they use their salaries for? The rest of us work for a living by paying for these items mentioned above from our salaries but our politicians don?t have to pay for these. They enjoy them free but that isn?t enough for them. They are greedy enough to dip their hands into state coffers to steal from the poorest of the poor. Our politicians are far removed from the daily struggles of the ordinary people. They have no idea how it feels to miss a rent payment or comb through the Help Wanted ads. No wonder the people have become disenchanted with the politicians.

It is important for political leaders to get out among the people, experience their daily life struggles and their aspirations and incorporate that into policy. Politicians seem to have no problem visiting the rural folks at election time when they need their votes but once elected they forget about them. I do not agree with those commentators who argue that political life at the top is so rigidly structured that a leader can?t control his or her own agenda. Our political leaders find time to play golf and to chase girls all over the place throwing caution to the winds, so why can?t they break out of their comfortable bubble to organize the people and join them in cleaning the filth that is engulfing our cities and posing a public health threat? It is partly a question of will. Apparently, our politicians have gotten the message that we are satisfied with their incompetence and arm chair leadership. We are not. If we don?t demonstrate our displeasure with the level of incompetence, greed, arrogance, and corruption in government they will assume we approve of such gross leadership failures.

In a modern democracy in its infant stages like ours, rulers are expected to leave their palaces, their offices, their castles, every so often, and share the struggles and frustrations of their people. They must demonstrate that they care about the poor. In that way the bring government near to the people, as things are now, government is far alienated from the people.

Ben Ofosu-Appiah.
Tokyo, JAPAN.
The author is a policy strategy advisor and a corporate trainer. He is also a political and a social commentator based in Tokyo, JAPAN.


Views expressed by the author(s) do not necessarily reflect those of GhanaHomePage.