Posts tagged GhanaDecides

NDC, NPP & the Ghana Statistical Service

Today’s headlines was all about the Ghana Statistical Service’s response to Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia’s speech at the 5th Ferdinand Ayim Memorial Lecture. Every newspaper and headline I saw quoted Acting Government Statistician, Dr. Philomena Nyarko’s response to Dr. Bawumia. In the past week, Ministry of Finance & Economic Planning, Governor of Bank of Ghana among others have come out to criticise the former Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana.

Source: @GhanaDecides

For me, it is sad to see a state institution like the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) being drawn into the NDC-NPP politicking Ghanaians are fed up with. (At least I am). 

Now one of them is being mischievous here and I wish I knew which of them is. All I know is this undermines our quest to build strong institutions. As many have argued and was echoed during Barrack Obama’s address to the Ghanaian Parliament in 2009, when he visited, we need to build strong, capable, reliable and transparent institutions. P

I really hope our greedy, deceitful and incompetent politicians will leave our state institution out of their politicking. At the end of the day, the politicians will come and go but the our state institutions will remain. Let’s build and defend our institutions. Let’s not let any government manipulate the GSS or any other state institution and let’s not let any party undermine the integrity of our institutions.

God bless our homeland Ghana!

A Successful Biometric Voter Registration?

It has been a while since I wrote here. The Glo post doesn’t count. It was just a quick post to answer all the questions that were coming at me on twitter. I have been quite busy with a lot stuff, the best of which is an election project I am involved in. 

For the past 40 days, we have all been involved and witnessed the biometric voter registration. I will cut the chase and say the exercise in my opinion was successful and peaceful despite the few incidents notable the clashes in Odododiodio and Kennedy Agyapong’s arrest

A lot of these could have been avoided if the Police was more vigilant and the political parties had a real control over their supporters.

I travelled to my hometown of Sunyani to register in the first phase. My polling centre, Ridge Experimental School as I expected, had no applicants at the time of my application. It allow for time to interact with the registration officers and take some pictures. I also got to understand how authentication of the device was done and how they back up data. The party agents from the NPP & NDC, although looked hungry were calm and didn’t ask any questions.

One thing which make the 40-day period worthwhile and I am not being bias here, was the #iRegistered tweets and comments. #iRegistered is a campaign which Ghana Decides run aggressively during the registration period to get people to register and share their experiences. It was interesting all the comments and reports which came in. Occasionally, people would tweet at the Ghana Decides twitter account.

So, if you’re reading this post and you are not following Ghana Decides on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Google+, Tumblr, Storify, Instagram, Skype, then you should do so now. Ghana Decides is a BloggingGhana (BloGH) election project. It seeks to leverage the use of social media in Ghana’s December 2012 elections. 

The President’s Encounter With Senior Editors & Journalists 2012: A Complete Waste of Time!

Good morning Ghana! I guess some of you spent some time watching or listening to the President’s interaction/encounter with senior editors and journalists at the Castle yesterday. Even if you missed it on radio and tv, you probably saw a couple of tweets or Facebook updates on it. 

Mills interacting with Media. Credit: Presidency of the Republic of Ghana

I did listen via radio in the office and after the one hour interaction/encounter, I found it a complete waste of my productive time. I was left very disappointed by the questions the senior editors and journalists asked as well as the response from the president. 

The senior editors and journalist focused on questions (in my opinion) are of very little relevance to the needs of Ghanaians now; not a single question was asked about education and health. I dare not mention technology, export and support for local businesses. I am not sure there was anything on unemployment and the other basic issues affecting Ghanaians. Instead, these so-called senior editors and journalists spent the little time talking about the relationship between President Mills and President Rawlings and how it would affect the his chances in the December poll. Ten questions were asked about the payment of judgement debt of GH¢53 million to Mr. Alfred Wayome. Yes, 10 questions and none bothered to ask about education. Don’t get me wrong, it’s good to talk about the state losing such a huge chunk of money but 10 questions whilst the basics are not tackled is quite pointless. This is what these so-called senior editors and journalists sought to do; they all wanted to be quoted as asking the president that ‘controversial’ questions and also get those useless front page stories for their newspapers. Shameless journalists.

One of many questions which in my opinion was out of place and unnecessary was that by Mary-Ann Acolatse, formally of Metro TV. She asked if the government would pay compensation to someone wrongfully imprisoned for 14 years. Isn’t this something you take to the courts, the A-G or the Commission of Human Rights & Administrative Justice (CHRAJ)? Again, probably one greedy journalist try to put her media house’s story in the spotlight. There were some praise singers as always.

With an encounter which comes once every year, I think we should have gone past one hour… but then, these journalists wouldn’t have gone past asking about the president’s health, wayomegate and ask more sensible or meaningful questions.

The reaction on twitter was no different from mine after the encounter. Tweeting with the hashtag #GhanaDecides, people expressed their outrage at journalists who made the whole encounter seem rehearsed (maybe it was). Like me, most tweeps from the it hard to believe these were really senior editors and journalists. The poor quality of the questions asked reflects in the discourse these media houses chart in the country. After all, to them, asking about improvement in health care won’t sell; they would rather ask about the president’s health. I bet the president would have been caught fumbling if he had met BloggingGhana or Barcampers.

As we move towards the December poll, I urge the people and the media to ask relevant and intelligent questions when given the opportunity. That is a pretty good way of holding politicians accountable and achieving the Ghana we ought to be.

God bless our homeland Ghana!