SPEECH DELIVERED BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF GHANA, NANA ADDO DANKWA AKUFO-ADDO, ON THE OCCASION OF THE 60TH INDEPENDENCE ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION, AT THE INDEPENDENCE SQUARE, ON MONDAY, MARCH 6, 2017
We are met here today to
celebrate the 60th anniversary of our nation’s independence, to celebrate our
freedom from the clutches of British imperialism, to celebrate the final
achievement of the struggle of successive generations of Ghanaians patriots to
establish a free, sovereign Ghana. We are grateful that on such a happy day,
leaders of our neighbouring countries and friendly nations have joined us in
our celebration. Akwaaba, Your Excellencies, to each one of you.
I thank the children
from across the country for their excellent march. I thank the cultural troupes
from across the country on their magnificent display, which has showcased the
best of Ghanaian culture.
Our Armed Forces and
security services are rightly celebrated across the region, the continent and
the world for their professionalism and contribution to global peace and
security. I thank the officers and the men and women of the Ghana Armed
forces, the police service and the other security services for their display of
order, pomp and ceremony. And I thank them all for their willingness to put
their lives on the line to secure our domestic peace and tranquillity and the
sanctity of our property.
I am happy to announce
that on my way to these grounds, Independence Square, I stopped to perform a
very important duty. I have this morning cut the sod for the commencement
of the building of a national cathedral of interdenominational worship in our
capital, Accra, which is supported by many of our leading figures of faith. It
is meant to be a gesture of thanksgiving to the Almighty for the blessings he
has showered and continues to shower on our nation.
Being independent means
you have the freedom and ability to make informed decisions in life without having
to ask other people for permission, help or money and you take full
responsibility for seeing things through.
Our founders chose this
day, March 6, as the date of our independence, in order to repudiate the Bond
of 6th March 1844, which led to our land becoming a British colony.
Fifty-three years later,
in 1897, a hundred and twenty years ago, a group of our forebears was moved to
start a campaign against the terms of the colonial relationship between what
was then the Gold Coast and the United Kingdom.
If the signing of the
Bond of 1844 marks the formal start of the Gold Coast colony, then the
formation of the Aborigines Rights Protection Society on 4th August, 1897, in
Cape Coast, marks the start of the struggle for political independence. It is
worth mentioning some of the names of the members of the Society because,
unfortunately, we have not often acknowledged their role – John Mensah Sarbah,
Joseph Casely Hayford, J.W. Sey, J.P Brown, and their colleagues, who mobilized
the chiefs and people against the Crown Lands Bill and forced the colonial
authorities to retreat. Sarbah began the tradition of the Ghanaian lawyer as a
nationalist.
This was probably one of
the most dramatic interventions in the colonial history of our country. One
hundred and twenty years after that event, its significance might be lost on
us. The very same objectives of the Crown Lands Bill were introduced at
the same time and became law in countries like Kenya, Zimbabwe, Zambia and
other British colonies around Africa and changed the course of their history.
The lands of the indigenous peoples were seized by the British Crown under that
law, an event from which, a century later, they have still not recovered.
In what was then the
Gold Coast, our lands remained ours because of the bravery of the members of
the Aborigines Rights Protection Society, and we must pay homage to these
patriots every day, especially on this 60th anniversary. Even though we
established and secured, in 1897, the continuing and inalienable rights to our
lands, we remained a colony and could not govern ourselves.
The next significant
event in the struggle occurred on August 4, 1947, exactly fifty years later to
the day of the formation of the Aborigines Rights Protection Society, when a
group of nationalists gathered in Saltpond for the launch of the United Gold
Coast Convention, the UGCC, the first political party in our country.
The founders of the
UGCC, then, met to demand independence from the British and 70 years after that
event, one still marvels at the clarity of thought and the passion that they
displayed. Some of the names of that momentous day have survived in our written
history and folk memory.
Five of them are on our
Ghanaian currency: Joseph Boakye Danquah; Emmanuel Obetsebi-Lamptey; William
Ofori-Atta; Ebenezer Ako-Adjei; and Edward Akufo-Addo. Kwame Nkrumah, the sixth
of the Big Six on the currency, was to join them later.
And there are others, equally
important that we should not forget, and I pay homage to George Paa Grant, R.S.
Blay, Cobinna Kesse, J.W. de Graft Johnson and Francis Awoonor Williams,
amongst others.
The speech, the Ghanaian
colossus, Danquah, made on that day, deserves to be quoted liberally on a day
like this. He said: “Love of freedom from foreign control has always been in
our blood. 870 years ago we struck against the attempt of the Arabs to impose a
religious slavery upon us in Ghana. We left our homes in Ghana and came down here
to build a new home. But there is one thing we brought with us from ancient
Ghana. We brought with us our ancient freedom. Today the safety of that freedom
is threatened. … We must fight against the new domination. And we must fight
with the weapons of today, constitutional, determined, persistent, unflinching,
unceasing, until the goal of freedom is attained.”
Danquah captured the
mood of the time and set our country on the path to independence. 4th August is
truly a sacred and seminal day in the annals of the Ghanaian people.
The unfolding of the
story is well known.
The UGCC leaders decided
they needed a full time person to run the party’s affairs; they sent for the
dynamic Kwame Nkrumah, and he came to join them in December 1947. Soon
thereafter, on 28th February, 1948, the notorious and senseless killings of
three ex-servicemen, Sergeant Adjetey, Corporal Attipoe and Private Odartey
Lamptey occurred, and sparked a nationwide revulsion against the colonial
power, which, undoubtedly, quickened the pace of the independence movement. The
Watson Commission followed, which mapped out the steps towards our eventual
attainment of independence.
In 1949, on 12th June,
Kwame Nkrumah broke away from the UGCC and formed his own party, the Convention
People’s Party. Even as he broke away, Kwame Nkrumah remembered from whence he
came and retained the word “convention” in the name of his new party, the CPP.
Eventually independence
came and Ghana, under the leadership of Kwame Nkrumah, became the first
sub-Saharan country to gain its freedom on March 6 1957. Danquah had done the
research and convinced himself and others that the bulk of the people thatn
inhabit these lands migrated from the ancient kingdom of Ghana.
In 1957, we lowered the
British flag and we jettisoned the name Gold Coast that had been given to us
and took on the name, Ghana, the name of our ancestral home. The name Ghana was
meant to give us a fresh start and mark the break from colonialism; and it was
also meant to give us a sense of our historical roots and the assurance that we
have a history, culture and civilisation that preceded colonialism.
We must remember, on a
day like this, some others who are not listed among the forefront fighters for
political freedom, but who fought equally hard for our cultural integrity and
the identification of who we are as Ghanaians.
I pay homage to Ephraim
Amu, Tata Amu as he was fondly called. He was the composer of what easily
passes as our unofficial National Anthem, Yen Ara Asase Ne. Is there a
Ghanaian among us today who can sing or hear that song, in whichever language,
without being moved?
Ephraim Amu stood alone,
most of the time, against what he saw as cultural domination. You did not have
to wear a European-cut suit to be a scholar, you could wear a fugu, kente and
above all, a locally woven fabric, and still be an educated person, he argued.
He insisted you did not have to eat foreign foods because you were a scholar,
and he insisted our music was as interesting and sophisticated as any around the
world. Those were radical ideas for the time.
I pay homage to Philip
Gbeho, the composer of our National Anthem, and to Theodosia Okoh, the designer
of our national flag. I pay homage to Kofi Antubam, the artist who first put
Ghanaian art on the map. I pay homage to Saka Acquaye, the poet, writer,
sculptor and musician, who wrote the first African folklore, The Lost
Fisherman. I pay tribute to J.A. Braimah, the Gonja scholar and statesman
who wrote insightful publications about the Gonja people.
I pay homage to Apaloo,
the poet who immortalised the philosophy and music of the Ewe language. I pay
homage to E.T. Mensah, King Bruce, Jerry Hansen and the others who popularised
highlife, which has become an enduring identity of Ghanaian music. I pay
tribute to the great musicologist, J.H. Nketia, who is the great authority on
African music.
I pay homage to Otumfuo
Prempeh I, who waged a heroic, even if unsuccessful, battle against the British
and retained his dignity even in exile. I pay homage to Yaa Asantewa, that
woman of valour, who led the Ashanti resistance to British imperialism. I pay
homage to Nana Ofori-Atta I, who saw the wisdom in investing in the education
of the young.
I pay homage to
Professor Alexander Adum Kwapong, the first Ghanaian Vice Chancellor of the
University of Ghana, who became an icon in the development of our educational
system.
I pay homage to Oko
Ampofo, sculptor and physician, who encouraged confidence in our traditional
arts and medicine. It is thanks to him that herbal medicine became a
respectable subject of study and research in our country.
I pay homage to Dede
Ashikisham and Akua Shorshorshor, famous market queens, who financed Kwame
Nkrumah and the nationalist movement from their successful businesses.
They and many others,
like them, contributed to the fight for independence and in moulding the
Ghanaian that emerged on March 6, 1957. The world shared our excitement and
wished us well.
Our first President,
Kwame Nkrumah, delivered his famous speech that midnight of March 5, 1957, a
few hundred yards from here at the Old Polo grounds. He said we were free
forever, and there cannot be a sweeter or more reassuring sound or set of words
than those to a people emerging from oppression. He said our independence would
prove that the black man or woman was capable of managing his or her own
affairs.
And then he said what
has probably been the most quoted part of that speech. He said “the
independence of Ghana was meaningless unless it was linked with the total
liberation of the whole continent of Africa”. In those words, Kwame
Nkrumah sealed the fate of Ghana to the continent. He bequeathed to us Ghana’s
pan African vocation and its commitment to the unity and integration of Africa.
We are grateful for his leadership and that of his colleagues, Komla Agbeli
Gbedema, the organisational genius of the Convention People’s Party, Kojo
Botsio, its theoretician, and the others who occupy prides of place in the
history of the nationalist movement.
We are equally grateful
for those in the Opposition at independence, who, at great personal cost and in
defiance of the infamous Preventive Detention Act of 1958, were determined to
hold aloft the banner of freedom, and who insisted that the multiparty
democratic state was the best form of governance for our nation. I refer to
Joseph Boakye Danquah, Emmanuel Obetsebi-Lamptey (Liberty Lamptey), Simon
Diedong Dombo, Kofi Abrefa Busia, Baffuor Osei Akoto, Victor Owusu, R.R
Amponsah, Joe Appiah, S.G. Antor, Modesto Akpaloo, Ashie Nikoi, Attoh Okine and
others. Our generation of Ghanaians have vindicated their stance. On 7th
December, 2016, the Ghanaian people exercised their sovereign franchise, in a
dignified and serene manner, to remove an incumbent and elect a new government,
and, thus, demonstrated again their deep attachment to democratic values and
governance.
The difficult times our
country went through after independence were to be replicated across the
continent: dalliances with a one-party state, military interventions, political
theory experimentations and instability; and, the collapse of economies and
with it, lives.
I must pay homage to
Professor Albert Adu Boahen, the eminent historian and academic. He found his
voice, spoke out, and ended the culture of silence. His courage was the
inspiration that sparked the agitation for the restoration of democratic rule.
Finally, in Ghana, a
consensus emerged with the coming into being of the Fourth Republic. We have
agreed on a multi-party constitutional democracy and a guarantee of individual
freedoms under the rule of law. These past 24 years have been the longest
period of political stability our country has enjoyed since independence, and
the effects are showing, albeit slowly.
The pace of our
development has quickened and our self-confidence, which had been severely
strained, has returned. At independence, the popular slogan was to seek first
the political kingdom and all other things would be added. We assumed and,
indeed, we expected that rapid economic development would follow the political
freedom that we achieved.
Sadly, the economic
dividend that was meant to accompany our freedom has still not materialised.
Sixty years after those heady days, too many of our people continue to wallow
in unacceptable poverty.
After sixty years, we
have run out of excuses and it is time to set Ghana to rights and get our
country to where it should be. The challenge before us is to build our economy
and generate a prosperous, progressive and dignified life for the mass of our
people. Hard work, enterprise, creativity and a consistent fight against
corruption in public life would bring the transformation we seek.
We will achieve these
goals when we move and act as a united people. We must take pride in our
diversity by all means, but the Ghanaian must always rise above the ethnic or
sectional interest. We have a bright future and we must mobilize all our
resources and all our strengths, here and in the Ghanaian Diaspora, to get to
that promised land faster.
It is turning out to be
a constant refrain, but, on a day like this, we cannot ignore the state of our
environment. We are endangering the very survival of the beautiful and blessed
land that our forebears bequeathed to us. The dense forests, that were home to
varied trees, plants and fauna, have largely disappeared. Today, we import
timber for our use, and the description of our land as a tropical forest no
longer fits the reality. Our rivers and lakes are disappearing, and those that
still exist are all polluted.
It bears repeating that
we do not own the land, but hold it in trust for generations yet unborn. We
have a right to exploit the bounties of the earth and extract the minerals and
even redirect the path of the rivers, but we do not have the right to denude
the land of the plants and fauna nor poison the rivers and lakes.
There is nothing we can
do better to pay homage to those who fought to free us from bondage than to
dedicate this 60th independence anniversary to protecting our environment and
regenerating the lands and water bodies.
I have confidence that
we can and will achieve the dreams of our forebears. I am hopeful that we will
continue to make ourselves worthy inheritors of this land. I know that we will
wear the accolade of being a Ghanaian with pride. Let us mobilize for the happy
and prosperous Ghana of tomorrow, in which all of us, including our youth, our
women and the vulnerable in our society, will have equal opportunities to
realise their potential, and build lives of dignity. Then, our independence
will be meaningful. Then, we will have a Ghana beyond aid.
Two months ago at my
inauguration on these grounds, I urged that we renew the sacred compact that
comes with being able to call yourself a citizen. I am proud that I am able to
say without equivocation, I am a Ghanaian citizen.
I wish you all a happy
Diamond Jubilee anniversary and God’s blessings.
May the Almighty bless
our homeland Ghana and make her great and strong.
Independence Square, Accra Ghana
SPEECH DELIVERED BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF GHANA, NANA ADDO DANKWA AKUFO-ADDO, ON THE OCCASION OF THE 60TH INDEPENDENCE ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION, AT THE INDEPENDENCE SQUARE, ON MONDAY, MARCH 6, 2017
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