HONEST-TO-GHANAIANS
Ama
Ghana: Kofi, Ghana our motherland is 56 years old hurray!
Kofi
Ghana: That is so Ama but I am deeply confused.
Ama
Ghana: Why are you confused?
Kofi
Ghana: because I have been thinking about Ghana.
Ama
Ghana: That is good of you, Kofi. I know you’re very patriotic but what really
is the problem?
Kofi
Ghana: It is not really a problem; it is a challenge – dishonesty is taking
root in Ghana.
Ama
Ghana: Dishonesty?
Kofi
Ghana: Yes-and-yes!
Kofi
Ghana: What do you think is the most important development need of Ghana?
Ama
Ghana: Selfless and visionary leaders.
Kofi
Ghana: That is so Ama but it is a half truth.
Ama
Ghana: Tell me you’re kidding Kofi.
Kofi
Ghana: I am serious, Ama.
Ama
Ghana: What then is the answer?
Kofi
Ghana: Ghana is in dire need of the virtue of honesty more than anything you
can think of.
Leadership
is central to development and growth of any nation but real leaders are rare.
The hallmark of real leaders is honesty.
Ama
Ghana: Kofi you’re right. Take for instance, the issue of the 2013 State of
Nation Address our President delivered
in Parliament recently. Even our Parliamentarians are divided about it. Some of them later held a
press conference on what they term the True
State of Nation Address. If all that the President told us is false, then that
is really serious. And it is also highly mischievous if the True State of Nation Address was just a political
gimmick. Who is telling the truth? Kofi,
I am equally confused!
Kofi
Ghana: Ama that is just one of the many instances. Think about the debates on the
energy and water crises; the issue about subsidies on fuel products; and the apathy
of the ordinary Ghanaian. More bizarre is the so-called fair comments about the
election petition before the Supreme Court. I wonder when it became a political
gala!
Ama
Ghana: Honesty is increasingly disappearing in the Ghanaian society. We are not
honest to one
another. We just smile to each other but we don’t really mean it. What we say
in public is directly opposite what we do in private. There is so much
hypocrisy and
selfishness in our society. Sadly, most of our institutions are full of
dishonesty.
Kofi
Ghana: We need to face this truth and decisively deal with it. Firstly, Ghana’s
interest must be
paramount in all our personal and collective dealings. Secondly, our laws must be
respected by all and sundry. The gross indiscipline in our society must stop!
Richard Obeng Mensah, author of If
You Think of Your Opposition You Lose Your Position.
Email: richardobengmensah@gmail.com
Blog: www.richard-obeng-mensah.blogspot.com
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