Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By
William Yaw Owusu
Wednesday,
December 3, 2014
The latest Afrobarometer survey results reveals that
Ghanaians trust the military more than any other public institution including
the presidency, parliament and judiciary.
The respondents also are of the opinion that the
police, follow by the government officials are notoriously known to be corrupt.
The survey result says 89% of the respondents said
the police service is the most corrupt institution, while government officials
came second with 86%.
Mahama Trust Decline
More Ghanaians trust opposition political parties
than they trust President John Mahama.
Whereas 45 per cent of Ghanaians say they trust
opposition political parties, only 40 per cent said they trust President
Mahama.
In fact, the President’s trust rating has dropped
significantly since he was elected in 2012 by as much as 16 per cent.
The President’s party, the National Democratic
Congress (NDC) is also one of the least trusted institutions in the country. Only
36% trust the governing NDC.
The trust in military which may as a result of
rising perceived corruption among the political class is sending shivers down
the spines of a section of the public especially politicians.
The 6th Round Afrobarometer Survey administered by
public think tank group, Centre for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana) and
released yesterday said that “the only public institution that enjoy
substantial level of trust in the military. More than half of Ghanaians (56%)
say they trust the military somewhat or a lot.”
Two MPs who could not hide their fright about the
fact that the public appeared to be reposing trust in the military especially
in the fight against corruption called on the three arms of government who are
the forefront of deepening the country’s democracy to take steps to restore
public confidence in public institutions without delay.
The first lawmaker to express worry was Yaw Owusu
Boateng, NPP MP for: Asene/Akroso/Manso who said “it is a dangerous perception
on the part of the public.”
“Some of us have fought hard to bring the democracy
that we are enjoying today. We have to work harder in order to erode public
perception that public institutions cannot be trusted,” he added.
When he took his turn Alfred Agbesi, NDC MP for Ashiaman
who said he was representing the Majority Leader said “I am afraid and so much
afraid! If we do not have confidence in the public institutions then where are
we going?”
He said “today, I am seriously surprised because in
1972 when the military took over, they told us that the few amenities they were
enjoying under the civilian administration were taken away from them so they
came to save us. It was not long in 1977/78 and within the military itself, we
realized that all were not well.”
He added: “If in 1992, we managed to bring the
civilian institutions back and today our own people are saying that public
institutions are not good, are we hereby inviting the military to come back?”
This year’s survey questions designed jointly by
Afro Barometer and anti-corruption body Transparency International used a
sample size of 2400 respondent from 177 districts and 291 towns in Ghana for
the Round Six Afro Barometer.
Police
The survey dubbed: "Trust and corruption in
Public Institutions: Ghanaian opinions" specifically tackled public trust
and corruption and respondents placed the military high on the perception of
trust while public officials were rated low in corrupt perception.
The Ghana Police Service was once again tagged by
respondents as the most corrupt but this time the rate of perception dropped
marginally according to Daniel Armah Attoh, Coordinator of Afro Barometer
Survey for Anglophone West Africa.
The report said 89% of the 2,400 respondents believe
the police institution has corrupted itself while government officials came
second with 86%.
Apart from the police, the survey which was
conducted between May and June 2014 also rated public institutions including
Ghana Revenue Authority, government officials, Electoral Commission, Members of
Parliament among others low in the perceptions of trust and corruption.
"54% responded that they have little or no
trust in information from government sources," the report said and "7
of 10 citizens (71%) of Ghanaians believe government has performed “very badly”
or “fairly badly” in fighting corruption."
Seventy five percent of Ghanaians said corruption is
on the ascendency while a lot of them (81%) also saw the Electoral Commission
as corrupt and added that the government has been very weak in fighting the
social canker.
The survey revealed majority of Ghanaians said they
trusted religious leaders (63%) and traditional leaders (50%) “somewhat” or “a
lot.”
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