Thursday, 14 January 2016

Closing Remarks by President John Dramani Mahama 2016 meet the Press

President John Dramani Mahama
My Brothers and Sisters;

This has indeed been an interesting and productive interaction. Thank you for your candid questions.

I have answered them honestly, transparently and, most important, with the hope that rather than my responses being an end-of-subject full-stop, they will be part of an ongoing discussion between the good people of Ghana, the media, members of my administration and me.

As with any conversation, in order to gain new and useful insights, it is important that we listen to one another- truly listen. What I have seen happening too often is people dismissing the viewpoints of others without even listening to what it is they have to say.

If we continue on this path, we run the risk of creating unnecessary divisions in our country—socially, ethnically, tribally, geographically, politically and even in the arena of religion and faith. And what we sometimes fail to hear is that we are all on the same side. We are all on the side of Ghana.

We may have differing opinions on how to get Ghana to the place where we want it to be, but the fact remains that we all do want to reach the same destination: One in which Ghana is fully developed, with a thriving economy, ample employment opportunities, a solid infrastructure, top-level educational system that is accessible and free to all, a functional health delivery system, an overall reduction in poverty, and so much more.
But that doesn’t happen overnight. Three years ago, when I was sworn in for my first term as President, the problems that Ghana was facing, while not insurmountable, were foundational.

The power crisis is a prime example. The process of load shedding did not begin with my administration. The problems in our infrastructure have been apparent for quite some time.
However, when confronted with the dilemma of how to resolve the problem, I opted not to go the route of a quick-fix because we, as a nation, cannot continue to make decisions for the short run.
True progress must be sustainable. What we needed was a stable foundation, not a patch-up job. And that would take time.
The decision I took to fully expand our energy infrastructure was not politically expedient or desirable. Indeed, the decision I took was quite unpopular.
But leadership and popularity are not the same thing, and every so often in the course of leadership, one has to make decisions that are neither popular nor politically expedient.
Such was the case during the 2014 Ebola Outbreak in West Africa. As President, I took the decision to allow Ghana, specifically, Accra, to serve as the base of operations for the United Nations and other relief organizations and efforts for the affected nations.
There was anger and outrage and accusations that I was exposing our country to Ebola; that because of my decision the virus would surely find its way across our borders and result in the loss of Ghanaian lives.
But the alternative—to turn our back on our neighboring nations in their time of need, especially as the world was taking its time to respond, would have not only been insensitive; it would have been inhumane.

Having Accra be the command post for humanitarian help during the Ebola crisis was not a popular decision, but I still maintain that it was the right thing to do.
Much in the same vein, my administration’s decision to permit entry to two former Guantanamo Bay detainees as well as refugees from Rwanda, Syria and Yemen have been met with fierce resistance.

I realize that our world is going through uncertain times. I realize, too, that no nation wants to open its doors to terrorists or to the possibility of terrorism. Still we cannot let the fear of what might be cloud our compassion or make us turn a blind eye to the very real need that does exist.

There are people who no longer have a country to call home; people who have been cleared of the charges of all alleged crimes; and people whose only crime is being born in a country whose name is now automatically associated with a group of insurgents terrorizing their fellow countrymen-and-women.
Ghana has a long history of humanitarianism.

We have a long history of being counted as a leader, not only on the African continent but also in the entire international community.
In 1960 Ghana became the first African nation to contribute troops to the UN Peacekeeping Force.

In 1961 Ghana became the first nation ever to receive volunteers from the newly established Peace Corps.
Throughout the years, Ghana has provided shelter for many freedom fighters and exiles.

Long before the world’s nations collectively declared the system of apartheid an abomination, Ghana was issuing passports, and a place to call home, to those fleeing the racial injustice and persecution taking place in South Africa; people such as Miriam Makeba and Hugh Masakela.
When Nigeria considered musician Fela Kuti a criminal and a troublemaker of the highest order, Ghana offered him a home.
During the two decades that civil war engulfed our sub-region, we accepted thousands of refugees and, at that time, for many Ghanaians it was a point of contention. They believed it would make us too vulnerable, that it might somehow move the war onto our soil.

Though it was not popular, the various administrations back then made the decision to grant refuge to those individuals because it was the right thing to do.

Ghana has even gone so far as to offer Africans in the Diaspora as a result of the trans-Atlantic slave trade the ability to gain citizenship and live permanently on our soil.
Fear is a powerful motivator. That’s the purpose of terrorism. It tests your commitment to who you are, your very principles; it tests your ability to stay true to your own history.

Ghana is our homeland, but we can never allow ourselves to forget that we are also citizens of a larger world, one that depends on the co-existence and the cooperation of all nations in order to achieve true peace and stability.


Nelson Mandela once said, “Our human compassion binds us the one to the other—not in pity or patronizingly, but as human beings who have learnt how to turn our common suffering into hope for the future.”

And there are many reasons for us here in Ghana to have hope for the future.
I thank you for your support.
I thank you for your kind attention, and your willingness to listen.

May God bless you, and may God continue to bless our beloved homeland, Ghana.

Emmanuel Dzivenu
(Radio Univers)

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