Posted on:
www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Friday, February
03, 2017
The name ‘Flagstaff House,’ Ghana’s seat of government, appears to
have been changed to ‘Jubilee House’ by the Akufo-Addo-led New Patriotic Party
(NPP) government.
Recent correspondences personally signed by President Nana Addo
Dankwa Akufo-Addo indicated ‘Jubilee House’ instead of ‘Flagstaff House.’
There has always been a tussle between the current NPP administration
and the former National Democratic Congress (NDC) government over what name
should actually be used for the seat of government.
Initially called Flagstaff House when Ghana’s first President Kwame
Nkrumah re-developed the facility in the 1960s to serve as his official
residence and office, the NPP government under President John Agyekum Kufuor,
rebuilt the whole place into a top-class edifice and changed the name to (Golden)
Jubilee House as a monument in commemoration of Ghana’s 50th independence
anniversary.
Before being used by Ghana’s first president, the facility had been
used as the residence of the Inspector General of the Gold Coast Constabulary
in the colonial days.
However, immediately after the NDC won power in 2009, it reverted to
‘Flagstaff House,’ sparking a heated political debate at the time, especially
when John Mahama moved his office to the place from the Osu Castle where his
predecessors, the late President John Evans Atta Mills, Presidents John Agyekum
Kufuor and Jerry John Rawlings had governed the country from.
Some other names put on important edifices were equally changed.
For instance, the immediate past Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA)
Chief Executive Alfred Okoe Vanderpuije - now MP for Ablekuma South - led an
operation to change the name Ohene Djan Sports Stadium to Accra Sports Stadium,
as well as the names of other state facilities in Accra.
The NDC top figures, then in opposition, condemned President Kufuor and
his NPP government for what they claimed to be profligate construction of the ‘Jubilee
House,’ which was funded by the Indian government with a very low interest on
the loan.
Some NDC officials were even on record as saying that they were
going to use the facility for poultry - a comment that attracted condemnation
from sections of the public.
President Mills did not use the Jubilee House and remained at the
Osu Castle; but when President John Mahama took over after the sudden demise of
the law professor, he (Mahama) moved into the edifice immediately he
controversially won the 2012 election.
The Mahama government started with correspondences on ‘Jubilee
Flagstaff House’ letterheads, indicating that it was merging the names.
However, when NDC General Secretary, Johnson Asiedu Nketia, was asked
about the development, he said cabinet had not taken any decision to merge the
two names.
Mahama Ayariga, then Minister of Information, had to take
responsibility for the gaffe and the name was soon reverted to ‘Flagstaff
House.’
Throughout the campaign, then NPP candidate Nana Addo Dankwa
Akufo-Addo never referred to the seat of government as ‘Flagstaff House.’
During the 2016 electioneering campaign, he said “Everybody should
come and ride on the back of the ‘Elephant’” (the NPP, as it uses the elephant
as its symbol). “The ‘Elephant’ has entered the White House; let us get the ‘Elephant’
in the Jubilee House.”
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