Features
Africans are our own enemies (Part 1)
The Bible is full of truths expressed so aptly that they encapsulate life’s realities in an explicitly transparent and comprehensible manner.
Take for example this passage from the Old Testament, precisely, Micah 7:6. It simply says: “A man’s enemies are those of his own household.” The Lord Jesus quotes it in Matthew !0:36 to authenticate the Old Testament as He usually does in His teachings.
To put it in context, the scripture deals with the friction and strife that may ensue among family members over Jesus – a kind of schism between those who believe His claims of deity and those who do not.
However, the word household goes beyond the immediate family setting and connotes a more generic meaning. In a broader sense, a household describes people of the same cohort.
It could be classmates, schoolmates, members of a team, a church congregation, members of a political party, workplace colleagues, citizens of the same village, town, country, or continent.
In other words, wherever there is any group with members sharing similar characteristics, aspirations, objectives, ideals, and so on and so forth, if you belong to that body, that is your household.
United we stand, divided we fall, so the saying goes. Therefore, the greatest benefit of belonging to a household is that there is strength in numbers. Consequently, the most sensible and profitable thing to do in that household is to unite on all fronts to mould the group into a formidable force able to withstand and overcome any external aggression.
Ghana’s founding father, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, recognised that need and championed the tenets of Pan-Africanism as a vehicle to galvanise the continent into an impregnable colossus spitting fire and brimstone against the external saboteurs of Africa.
His clenched-fist determination and fierce resolve to lead Africa’s emancipation from the shackles of imperialism, colonialism, and neo-colonialism, bolstered by his political savvy, charisma, oratory, and pervasive influence across Africa, made him a target of the imperialist West, led by the US and Great Britain.
Moreover, he had an expansive and ever-increasing constituency of adherents across Africa, and an unflinching, almost arrogant confidence in the ultimate success of his Pan-Africanist project.
That was during the Cold War between the West and the Soviet Union for greater influence around the world. Africa, in particular, offered more attraction, given its rich natural resources like oil, gold, uranium, copper, rubber, bauxite, diamonds, manganese, cocoa, and many more.
And with Nkrumah’s credentials, coupled with his perceived soft spot for socialism, the West viewed him as Russia’s go-to man in their agenda to spread communism in Africa and win the Cold War.
For that reason, America and its allies regarded him as an enemy and a real threat to their selfish ambitions and economic interests.
In fact, a declassified memo from the Accra station of America’s spying agency, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) described him thus: “Nkrumah is doing more to undermine our interests than any other black African.”
He, therefore, became a prey for the predatory imperialists who figured how to get him. This is where the Bible quotation fits into the equation.
The Western collaborators knew that: one, “a man’s enemies are those of his own household;” two, “a kingdom divided against itself cannot stand,” and, three: they also knew what to do to disintegrate Nkrumah’s mass following across the globe: “Strike the shepherd and the sheep will scatter.”
So, those maxims became the rallying cry of the West as they sought to execute their plot to keep Africa divided, weak, vulnerable, dependent, and subservient.
They needed traitors to help them. Unfortunately for Ghana and Africa as a whole, the enemy has always been within from time immemorial, a situation that the West exploited to execute their diabolic scheme and undermine Nkrumah and Africa for good.
Unknown to Nkrumah, the hierarchy of his army and the police were in cahoots with the CIA, and their British counterparts, M16, planning to overthrow him through a coup d’état.
All was set for the kill. They were only waiting for Nkrumah to travel abroad, an itinerary which they knew was very imminent.
In fact, the very day Nkrumah left on his impending foreign trip, that is, February 21, 1966, Lt. General E.K. Kotoka and his gang met and selected Lt. General J.A. Ankrah as head of the junta thus, the head of state, even before the coup took place. How treacherous the enemy within can be!
The role of the US, and their Western allies, especially, Great Britain, has since been revealed in declassified documents part of which was quoted earlier.
As a matter of fact, Nkrumah was suspicious of the US and, on February 26, 1964, two whole years before the coup, wrote about his apprehensions to U.S. President, Lyndon Johnson, criticising what he described as: “two conflicting (US) establishments” operating in Ghana.
Explaining his point, he wrote: “There is the United States Embassy as a diplomatic institution doing formal diplomatic business with us; there is also the C.I.A. organisation which functions presumably within or outside this recognized body.
“This latter organisation, that is, the C.I.A., seems to devote all its attention to fomenting ill-will, misunderstanding and even clandestine and subversive activities among our people, to the impairment of the good relations which exist between our two Governments.”
And how true his suspicion turned out to be! With the CIA’s help, the junta, led by Kotoka, successfully staged their coup on February 24, 1966, three days after their secret meeting and ousted Nkrumah from office.
He was away to Hanoi in North Vietnam, to broker peace and try to end the Vietnam War. He could never return to Ghana, his homeland, and died as an exile in Guinea in 1972.
It is said that “a prophet is not acceptable in his own country.” And so, Ghana rejected their inspirational leader, but Guinea made him an honorary co-President with all the perks that the office offered him until he died.
And what were the coup plotters promised? Read what Robert W. Komer, a CIA operative deep in the know, wrote to US President Johnson after the CIA got rid of Nkrumah:
“In reaction to his strongly pro-communist leanings, the new military regime is almost pathetically pro-Western. The point of this memo is that we ought to follow through skillfully and consolidate such successes.”
He added: “A few thousand tons of surplus wheat or rice, given now when the new regimes are quite uncertain as to their future relations with us, could have a psychological significance out of all proportion to the cost of the gesture.”
Concluding, Mr. Komer said: “I am not asking for lavish gifts to these regimes – indeed, giving them a little only whets their appetites, and enables us to use the prospects of more as leverage.”
What a shame, Africa! The imperialists did not even deem their co-conspirators, the enemies within, worthy enough of a certain modicum of respect after beguiling them to betray their country. Surplus wheat and rice were what it took to dull the conscience of our educated military and police officers. There is no doubt that monetary inducement was part of the bargain.
Nevertheless, the language of the CIA memo is pathetic. It speaks volumes of how low the enemies within can stoop to destroy their own household. They know no shame. They are still at it.
Remember that the memo from the CIA referred to “these regimes” indicating that the operations of the spy agency and their cohorts are pervasive throughout Africa and other jurisdictions earmarked for their subversive agenda.
Next week, the discussion will centre on how another inspirational African leader, Patrice Lumumba of the Belgian Congo, now Democratic Republic of Congo, was literally hounded in his own country by the Western powers in tandem with his own compatriots.
It was this conscientious African militant nationalist leader who led the struggle to free his country from the tyranny of its colonial power, Belgium while he was only in his 30s.
But the people for whom he sacrificed so much to liberate from colonialism proved to be the enemies within the household just as it happened in Ghana.
By Tony Prempeh
Contact:
teepeejubilee@yahoo.co.uk
Features
Let’s pay attention to our teachers
All over the world, it has been recognised that nations who have developed, paid attention to education and continue to do so. If we pay lip service to the development of our educational system, we might as well forget about our development in the foreseeable future.
In order for effective teaching and learning to happen, the teacher who is the centre of it all, must be well motivated. Every person working in an office, every parliamentarian, every minister or deputy minister, all the way up to the first gentleman of the land, owes his or her status to a teacher.
Unfortunately, for some strange reason, our leaders who are the decision makers, do not seem to care very much about the welfare of teachers. The leadership of the various teacher unions, also appear not to be doing their job as is expected of them, leaving the teacher who had worked for over a year without being paid, frustrated.
The lack of seriousness that is attached to teachers’ issues is very worrying. My parents were teachers so I am very passionate about teachers’ issues. Gone are the days that we used to say that teachers will get their reward in Heaven.
Now those in the teaching profession are mostly youthful and they have a different mindset from that of our parents. They do not want their reward in Heaven, they want it here on this very earth.
A teacher sees his colleague who he was academically better than in school, from the same background socially, becomes a Municipal Chief Executive (MCE), an Member of Parliament (MP) or a Government Appointee and overnight, this guy becomes wealthy and you say he the teacher, should wait for his reward in Heaven?
His going there is not guaranteed anyway, so if he or she does not make it to Heaven, then what? Promises of government after government to teachers, remain unfulfilled and so they become disillusioned and demotivated to ensure effective teaching and learning.
I read a story of a lady, who as a child was suffering from Dyslexia but her teacher gave her the needed attention to help her and this even led her teacher to run into problems with the school authorities, resulting in the loss of her job. This lady grew up and became a famous actress and won an Oscar.
She then gave the prize money attached to the award, which was three million dollars, to her teacher who put her career on the line to help her out of her dyslexia challenge as a child.
There are many such teachers in our educational system because teaching is a calling, like medicine, like nursing etc. and therefore teachers who are the first point of call before we can climb the ladder to become the engineers, the lawyers, accountants and the rest, deserve special attention.
What is even important is the crucial role they play in shaping the moral character of future leaders which is invaluable.
Let us all, especially our leaders, place a high premium on the teacher who is at the centre of our educational system and who can make or unmake our future as a nation. How do you ask a teacher to go to a place, far removed from his or her parents and for a year and above not pay any salary to him or her?
How is the teacher to survive? If the same thing was done to any of our leaders, especially the leaders of the various teacher unions, will they be happy? How do they expect the teachers to survive and also be motivated to deliver quality teaching? Funds must be found to immediately resolve their unpaid salaries do they can be in the right frame of mind to do their very precious job. The teaching profession, in my view, is number one, when ranking professions because as an advert displays “If you can read this, thank a teacher”. Let us give our teachers their due. God bless.
By Laud Kissi-Mensah
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Features
Searching for the Holy Child

GREETINGS from Korkorti and from Kofi Owuo, alias Death-By-Poverty. When this column took a short break, the two friends summoned me. They wanted to know whether the column had gone on pension or was just on strike. I explained that the column was not on retirement and neither was it on a hunger strike. Rather, the column was of the habit of falling into coma for four weeks or thereabout every year.
Kwame Korkorti and Kofi Owuo (who is addicted to poverty and has sworn not to prosper) are two of my former classmates I cherish so much. And it was great fun to be a Nino in those days. In fact, on the first day on campus, Korkorti was bold enough to bully his own mates who tragically mistook him for a senior.
In fact, when the first-years arrived, Korkorti was one of them but quickly pretended he was in Form 2. So he began pulling the noses of his mates and brushing their faces when the real seniors were not quite in sight. It was when classes began that his victims realised the so-called nose-pulling senior was in fact their own classmate.
So Korkorti got famous for that gimmick. But his English was poor.
The English master was a tall, bombastic young man who claimed he was a former soccer star. In fact, he swore he had a magical left foot that was comparable to that of the legendary Pele. And his grandiloquence par excellence clearly distinguished him from other members of staff.
He did not quite like Korkorti because although the boy was stubborn and his head did not have a nice shape, the girls adored him. Moreover he never did his English Language assignments.
Stand up, you tall fool, the English master often ordered. Korkorti wouldn’t stand up but would just smile broadly.
“I say stand up” the teacher would bark now like a dog suffering from rabies “Get up and let me measure your stupidity.”
Korkorti would stand up this time round and yawn.
Certainly, lunchtime has been long in coming and a good yawn often relieved the young student’s stomach of gastronomic stress.
Invariably, the English guru did not like it when Korkorti yawned. For one thing, the boy opened his mouth too widely. For another, he yawned a bit too audibly and that caused laughter among his mates.
Certainly, the master must have figured out that the boy’s height was proportional to his stupidity. But there were no school rules against yawning
Merari Alomele’s
• A female student walking away from some male students
or wide mouth. In fact, there was freedom of yawning and snoring and Korkorti exercised both freedoms judiciously and democratically.
“Do you know when you yawn you look like a hungry crocodile,” the master once asked him.
“Yes sir, I am aware sir,” Korkorti confirmed and yawned again. This time he nearly swallowed the whole class. There was an uproar and the whole class reverberated in good laughter.
The English master shook his head and then nodded it like an agama lizard. This Korkorti boy was a real character, a phenomenon, a one-man thousand. Meanwhile lessons had to continue.
It was in those days when school was exciting and we often gathered and talked about girls. I had often dreamt of having a girl from Holy Child School because I had heard very saintly and curious things about them, I had learnt from a guy from Saint Augustine’s College that Holy Child girls were of a special breed, in fact a hybrid between the cultured home-bred variety and those of inner holiness. They were born of the Holy Spirit. The only thing was that they didn’t suffer under Pontius Pilate.
In short, they were angels in human form, spoke in a special way, walked with a unique and danced with heavenly steps. They were taught by Holy Nuns and so were quite different from us who had no hope of making any spirito-culturo-scholastic progress.
I confessed to Korkorti that I wanted a girl from Holy Child, not for immoral purposes but to partake of their saintly ways so that when it was time for going to heaven, Kwame Alomele could also be considered.
During vacations we met girls from Mawuli, Ola, Accra Girls, St. Roses, Wesley Girls but none from Holy Child. Then one day, Kwame Korkorti whispered into my ear that a Holy Child babe was in town and that he was sure my dreams had come true.
Korkorti organised it and we positioned at a spot, knowing the girl would traverse en route to the library or the market. After a boring period of waiting, Korkorti suddenly espied the child coming. I looked at her face and saw of an angel. What! This was the kind I always wanted. God bless my soul! This was really my chance and Korkorti had prophesied it.
“Hello Sister,” Korkorti called her when about to leave us.
The girl slowed down and looked at us. My heartbeat increased in tempo. What really was I going to tell this angel? Wouldn’t she think Korkorti was Satan and me a common red-eyed demon? I gathered courage.
“What do you want?” she asked in a sweet voice. My heart melted instantly. Spotless beauty with voice that did something to me. Good gracious!
“Eh-h, my friend says he likes you,” Korkorti to her bluntly.
At that very moment I felt as if a sledge-hammer had hit my chest with the force of a dynamite. What a blunder! What a shock! I felt dizzy instantly. My bosom friend had balked the whole agenda. Before I could recover from the shock, the girl had walked away. From that day. I never met another holy child.
In January, this year, I miraculously received a letter from an 18-year old Holy Child student who said she was my fan.
It was a nicely written letter and I enjoyed reading it. I then relived the Korkorti incident and laughed aloud to myself.
So when Korkorti and Kofi Owuo summoned me, I reminded them of the day my heart melted at the sight of the angel; that angel which disappeared before my eyes and made me go back home not crying and yet not laughing.
Proofread
Searching for the Holy Child
GREETINGS from Korkorti and from Kofi Owuo, alias Death-By-Poverty. When this column took a short break, the two friends summoned me. They wanted to know whether the column had gone on pension or was just on strike.
I explained that the column was not on retirement and neither was it on a hunger strike. Rather, the column was of the habit of falling into coma for four weeks or thereabout every year.
Kwame Korkorti and Kofi Owuo (who is addicted to poverty and has sworn not to prosper) are two of my former classmates I cherish so much. And it was great fun to be a Nino in those days. In fact, on the first day on campus, Korkorti was bold enough to bully his own mates who tragically mistook him for a senior.
In fact, when the first-years arrived, Korkorti was one of them but quickly pretended he was in Form 2. So he began pulling the noses of his mates and brushing their faces when the real seniors were not quite in sight. It was when classes began that his victims realised the so-called nose-pulling senior was in fact their own classmate
So Korkorti got famous for that gimmick. But his English was poor.
The English master was a tall, bombastic young man who claimed he was a former soccer star. In fact, he swore he had a magical left foot that was comparable to that of the legendary Pele. And his grandiloquence par excellence clearly distinguished him from other members of staff.
He did not quite like Korkorti because although the boy was stubborn and his head did not have a nice shape, the girls adored him. Moreover he never did his English Language assignments.
Stand up, you tall fool, the English master often ordered. Korkorti wouldn’t stand up but would just smile broadly.
“I say stand up” the teacher would bark now like a dog suffering from rabies “Get up and let me measure your stupidity.”
Korkorti would stand up this time round and yawn.
Certainly, lunchtime has been long in coming and a good yawn often relieved the young student’s stomach of gastronomic stress.
Invariably, the English guru did not like it when Korkorti yawned. For one thing, the boy opened his mouth too widely. For another, he yawned a bit too audibly and that caused laughter among his mates.
Certainly, the master must have figured out that the boy’s height was proportional to his stupidity. But there were no school rules against yawning or wide mouth. In fact, there was freedom of yawning and snoring and Korkorti exercised both freedoms judiciously and democratically.
“Do you know when you yawn you look like a hungry crocodile,” the master once asked him.
“Yes sir, I am aware sir,” Korkorti confirmed and yawned again. This time he nearly swallowed the whole class. There was an uproar and the whole class reverberated in good laughter.
The English master shook his head and then nodded it like an agama lizard. This Korkorti boy was a real character, a phenomenon, a one-man-thousand. Meanwhile lessons had to continue.
It was in those days when school was exciting and we often gathered and talked about girls. I had often dreamt of having a girl from Holy Child School because I had heard very saintly and curious things about them,
I had learnt from a guy from Saint Augustine’s College that Holy Child girls were of a special breed, in fact a hybrid between the cultured home-bred variety and those of inner holiness. They were born of the Holy Spirit. The only thing was that they didn’t suffer under Pontius Pilate.
In short, they were angels in human form, spoke in a special way, walked with a unique and danced with heavenly steps. They were taught by Holy Nuns and so were quite different from us who had no hope of making any spirito-culturo-scholastic progress.
I confessed to Korkorti that I wanted a girl from Holy Child, not for immoral purposes but to partake of their saintly ways so that when it was time for going to heaven, Kwame Alomele could also be considered.
During vacations we met girls from Mawuli, Ola, Accra Girls, St. Roses, Wesley Girls but none from Holy Child. Then one day, Kwame Korkorti whispered into my ear that a Holy Child babe was in town and that he was sure my dreams had come true.
Korkorti organised it and we positioned at a spot, knowing the girl would traverse en route to the library or the market. After a boring period of waiting, Korkorti suddenly espied the child coming. I looked at her face and saw of an angel. What! This was the kind I always wanted. God bless my soul! This was really my chance and Korkorti had prophesied it.
“Hello Sister,” Korkorti called her when about to leave us.
The girl slowed down and looked at us. My heartbeat increased in tempo. What really was I going to tell this angel? Wouldn’t she think Korkorti was Satan and me a common red-eyed demon? I gathered courage.
“What do you want?” she asked in a sweet voice. My heart melted instantly. Spotless beauty with voice that did something to me. Good gracious!
“Eh-h, my friend says he likes you,” Korkorti to her bluntly.
At that very moment I felt as if a sledge-hammer had hit my chest with the force of a dynamite. What a blunder! What a shock! I felt dizzy instantly. My bosom friend had balked the whole agenda. Before I could recover from the shock, the girl had walked away. From that day. I never met another holy child.
In January, this year, I miraculously received a letter from an 18-year old Holy Child student who said she was my fan. It was a nicely written letter and I enjoyed reading it. I then relived the Korkorti incident and laughed aloud to myself.
So when Korkorti and Kofi Owuo summoned me, I reminded them of the day my heart melted at the sight of the angel; that angel which disappeared before my eyes and made me go back home not crying and yet not laughing.
This article was first published on Saturday, March 18, 1996
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