Dr. Sulley Gariba - Senior Policy Coordinator at the Presidency launching the book on behalf of the President
Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By
William Yaw Owusu
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Former President John Agyekum Kufuor says the
challenge of Africa has been how to overcome bad governance.
He said until the canker of bad governance is
uprooted from the continent, its people would continue to live in despair.
“Everywhere, people talk about freedom and democracy
but when you look at the situation critically, you find that in most of the
countries, people are not allowed freedom and opportunity to choose their own
leaders through genuine elections.”
The former President was speaking at a well-attended
book launch on the African Peer Review Mechanism at the State House in Accra
yesterday.
The book titled “The African Peer Review Mechanism
(APRM) as Africa’s innovative thinking on governance: A decade of Ghana’s
experience” was authored under the distinguished patronage of former President
Kufuor by Professor S.K.B Asante, a member of the APRM Governing Council.
In the publication, special attention was given to a
decade of Ghana’s APRM experience as the country has been Africa’s stabilizer
and a shining example in the implementation of the APRM process and many see
this effort as first academic study on the APRM and its impact on the
governance landscape.
As the first President to submit himself for peer
review, President Kufuor said that African governments should continue to pursue
the strengthening of institutions for democracy and good governance to grow.
“You can write in constitutions fine institution but
that will be paperwork if we do not have good people to fill the institutions
to implement the policies that are enshrined in the constitutions.”
President Kufuor, Nana Dr. S.K.B Asante and Prof S.K.B Asante, author of the book
He said the APRM was enjoining the governments on
the continent to promote good governance and also to voluntarily submit themselves
to be peer reviewed so that they would deepen the democratic culture saying “I
haven’t given up hope about the APRM because I know if my colleague Presidents
pursue it we will make Africa a better continent for the people.”
He said he had always believed that it would be
through good governance that “we would be able to accelerate democracy and
development.”
Mr. Kufuor who clocked 75 years on Sunday, said until
the APRM was designed it was a mere talk about Africa’s way forward as far as
economic development and democracy was concerned but the process appeared to
have brought some hope for the future.
He said “we have gained political independence but
we still depend heavily on the developed world even though in terms of natural
resources, we are second to none.”
“Throughout history, Africa has tended to be on the
sidelines because the developed countries have been moving at a rapid pace
through science and technology and have also given themselves accountable
governance.
“We have to allow the people to choose their own
leaders. Everybody wants freedom to explore and that is what African leaders
should continue to afford the people. There should be a platform to channel the freedoms constitutionally so that the governance systems would be owned by the
people.
Dr. Sulley Gariba, a Senior Policy Coordinator at
the Presidency who represented President John Dramani Mahama commended the
author, APRM Governing Council as well as
former President Kufuor for the visionary leadership that ensured that Ghana
voluntarily submitted itself to be peer reviewed and promised President
Mahama’s continuous support for the process.
“This book is the manifestation of the growing
maturation for the very essence of our democracy,” Dr. Gariba quoted President
Mahama as saying, adding “the book is about a pioneering initiative that is
made in Africa, led by Africans, funded by Africa under the highest leadership
of the Presidents, Heads of State.”
“We have come to an era when Africa needs to tell
its own story but we cannot tell our story if we do not review our
circumstances and this makes the APRM unique,” he said.
Prof. S.K.B. Asante, author of the book said the
book assesses, in particular, the pioneering and innovative models which Ghana
had commendably introduced and thus made the country a “Mecca” of democracy and
good governance.
Dr. Baffour Agyeman-Duah, a Member of the Board of
Directors of Centre for Democratic Development (CDD) who reviewed the 270 page book
praised Prof. Asante for sustaining the debate for good governance and
democracy on the continent.
Reverend Prof. S.K Adjepong, Chairperson of the
National APRM Council announced that 17 out of 33 countries covering a
population of about 75 per cent on the continent had gone through the peer
review mechanism.
Nana Dr. S.K.B. Asante, Omanhene of Asokore
Traditional Area who chaired the function underscored the need for Ghana a
continuous lead role in the APRM process for the sustenance of democracy.
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