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From Standard Times Press News Paper MEDIA & SOCIETY
Listening to the BBC’s Umaru Fofanah Thursday July 10, 2008 on the President’s presumptive move to ‘offload’ some members of the cabinet whom he thinks are excess baggage’s and in his words "to stabilize the vessel," I could not help but chuckle. In the deeper bottom of my heart, I have known (just like many more) all along that the caliber of men and One needs only to look at this administration’s entrenched partisanship, and regional pandering to get a gist of why things are happening the way it is, and not the way it should, and it’s disappointing to say the least. Drug Scandal and Poverty No, we cannot be silent. This is not about being partisan. It has everything to do with our country that we love dearly. And one begs to differ with the Foreign Minister who said that we should be applauded for having apprehended a plane load of 700 kilogram cocaine. The Minister is completely out of touch with world realities on the issue of narcotics trafficking to be saying those words. Where is the applause line when top governments officials are now being named in the ongoing drug investigation? Whoever thinks this is a one time episode must be joking. Media reports have now shown that this drug practice has been going on, and that Port Loko is now being used by drug peddlers as a hub and distribution center for the rest of the region and Europe. Instead of being applauded Mrs. Foreign Minister, your government should be embarrassed, just like we are. Attitudinal Change This is true of our teachers teaching from a must buy pamphlet or rescheduling class work for private lessons, to the students who cheats to get the grades instead of studying hard. And can relate to these frustrations as the realities speak for themselves, when there is a justice system that is broken and tilted to the privileged few, propped by a civil service that is tapered bureaucratic and adeptly perceived corrupt. If you throw in a media that remains split between the real journalists and those who are in for the quick fix, then the whole attitudinal change slogan becomes a toss up. One sees the societal collapse witnessed today as self-inflicted, allowed thriving for decades without doing much about it. Bold leadership is needed to stop the bleeding. Our leaders both past and present have not shown the political will to deliver the knockout punch. Our nation will only move forward from the rot we find ourselves when there is a true disciplinarian and humanitarian at state house. This country is hungry for a leader who will stand up for what he or she believes in, fighting for the poor, ensuring there is fairness and wealth distribution across the board. We are in need of a leader who can feel the pain of the least one of us. Just like Mandela invoked on his 90th birthday bash, it is time for the rich to give up some of their wealth to the poor. The President’s call for attitudinal change should in fact begin from now, filter down to his ministers, aides and associates, for the message to sink home that it is for real, and means. President Koroma upon assumption of office was categorical on his application of zero tolerance across the board, without any sacrificial lamb, not even a family member. Not many though are impressed with these gains as was demonstrated in the just concluded local elections with only 38 percent showing off to the polls. People are disenchanted, battling to face-off with the harsh economic realities taken a toll on them. Do not expect folks at the receiving end, the police man, or driver, teacher or civil servant earning such a paltry sum that is hardly paid on time, and who can barely scrape through to make ends meet, adopt verbatim this transformative change when the political elites walk tall, in comfort, and living lavish lifestyle with reckless abandon. Corruption These are the hard questions that must be asked by the ACC to foreclose this bad rap involving USD 30 Million. In March of 2008, World Bank drug contract brouhaha brewed allegedly finger-pointing the administration’s PRO henchman – Hon Alpha Kanu. The revelations surrounding some USD$ 2-4 Million drug supply became a media circus, as the PRO and the Health Minister exchanged some verbal swipes at one another, prompting the Minister to threaten resignation if push comes to shove. He has since back down from that threat. Time and again, haven’t we read, or heard about the VP’s name being associated with one business transaction or the other, from timber exploitation to diamonds, and real estate here in the US. All of these insinuations it appears have fallen on dear ears, for we have not seen the ACC weigh in on these serious allegations. It took the Kenya’s Finance Minister Amos Kimunya a week of protest and vote of no-confidence in parliament to step down on Tuesday July 8, 2008, due to his mis-handling of the sale of a government-owned hotel luxury Grand Regency to a Libyan government. No amount of PR could spin the perception that the minister’s under-cover transaction was ethical. The good thing about it all is that he has since resigned. How disgusting is it learning of the recent drug controversy unfolding before our very eyes. A perfect opportunity is now being presented to President Koroma to act justifiably, and vindicate himself that he is tough on corruption. Anything other than that will give a different interpretation. Nobody knows for sure when the new Anti-corruption bill will pass through the chambers of parliament, particular now that both parliament and the ACC is stuck over the independence provision to persecute culprits without any litigation from the Attorney General’s office. In fact, there shouldn't be any squabble over this, for the President has already promised a complete autonomy of the ACC. That said, civil society and pro-anti corruption groups must organize and strengthen their level of opposition to ensure that this bill passes without any glitch. Accountability - the way forward Civil society and the press must continue to ask the tough questions and be seen as the mouth piece of the voiceless to ensure that business is not conducted as usual, that change must happen for the good of the country. Some of us would no longer sit by but will stay alert and demand governance accountability. What about you? |