10th December 2004
Reflections on Ghana’s recent election
By ‘Kayode Fayemi
In the arena of post cold war democratisation in Africa,
Ghana clearly hit the ground running. From the first election in
1992 that saw the transformation of Flight Lt Jerry Rawlings to
President Jerry Rawlings, through the 1996 ‘stolen election’, to
the 2000 election, which resulted in the alternation of power
from Rawlings’ NDC Government to John Kuffuor’s NPP government,
the 2004 election promised all the elements of a consolidation
election. This was the context of the ECOWAS-West Africa Civil
Society Forum’s observer mission to Ghana’s election this week.
Although ECOWAS deployed its own official observer mission, the
leadership of West African civil society bodies affiliated to
ECOWAS also felt we needed to undertake our own mission. It was
a small team of ten led by Sierra Leone’s civil society activist
and politician, Zainab Bangura and we deployed in five regions –
Greater Accra, Volta, Ashanti, Eastern, and Northern regions. I
was in the Greater Accra region with our Team Leader, Zainab
Bangura, and coordinated the reports from our colleagues in the
hinterland.
Although we were prepared for a well-run election, as
Africans who have also ‘monitored’ elections in several African
countries, we were on the lookout for inadequacies. In terms of
the preparation and even-handedness of the electoral commission,
we were not disappointed. The Electoral Commission arranged our
accreditation promptly even though we applied late, it sent its
officials to train us on the peculiarities of elections
observation in Ghana, and the training covered a range of
subjects from security to the voter register. Finally, the EC
invited us to contact its officials immediately we notice
anything unusual during the voting exercise. In the period prior
to the polls we also met with the leadership of the major
political parties, NPP, NDC and CPP, and they all evinced a
strong desire for a peaceful and well-run election. All espoused
non-violence and all said that if they lost they would seek
redress through legal means or accept defeat. It was apparent
that campaigning also involved an element of voter education,
for example in how to mark the ballots correctly, making the
point that those with a vested interest can be the most
committed teachers.
The parties were not without complaints, especially officials
of the official opposition – NDC and these were extensively
documented in a “Memorandum for Foreign and Domestic Observers
and Monitors” which was shared with us by its officials. Their
concerns ranged from the Voters Identification Card system,
delays in disbursement of funds to the EC, manipulation of the
media and biased coverage in favour of the ruling party,
training of foreign mercenaries and importation of weapons and
the alleged partisan involvement of President Obasanjo of
Nigeria. On the eve of the election, the NDC insisted on a
meeting of all the political parties with the Electoral
Commission to discuss lingering concerns about the “flawed
process”. We attended the meeting as observers and it was
interesting to see the manner the Electoral Commission responded
to all the allegations made by the NDC, both in the way it
conceded on some of the gaps noticed by NDC and in the manner it
held its own grounds on other aspects of its preparations. I am
familiar with many of these allegations as a Ghanaian resident
and felt the EC did a good job of demonstrating its
independence.
On Election Day, our team visited no fewer than forty polling
stations in the Greater Accra region. It was only in one station
that the election did not start promptly at 7.a.m because
materials did not arrive there due to a vehicle breakdown. We
made a point of speaking particularly to party polling agents
and it was remarkable that not a single polling agent,
particularly those from the opposition parties had any
complaints to make to us. In a few polling booths with unusually
large number of voters, there was some rowdiness, but by the
time we brought this to the notice of the Deputy Chairman in
Charge of Operations at the EC headquarters, the Commission
promptly took action. In all cases, police presence was hardly
noticeable as they stood some distance from the polling
officials, except when their attention was requested. Our
colleagues in the other regions painted pretty much the same
picture, except the Northern region where there were pockets of
violence in the Bawku constituency. With respect to counting,
this was done at each polling station immediately after voting
stopped at 5.p.m. In a unique collaboration between Joy 99 FM
station, the Institute of Economic Affairs and Ghana’s largest
mobile telephone company, Spacefon, results were relayed by
phone to the news studio and broadcast, across the country.
What Ghanaians have managed to do with this election is prove
that election management is no rocket science. It requires
adequate and competent preparation, a high degree of
transparency, a responsible government, which respects its own
citizens and an alert citizenry ready to protect their vote. It
does not matter who wins the election in Ghana as the results
were still coming in by the time this was written, but the
process that I witnessed was without exaggeration better than
what transpired in the last US election.
Yet in spite of all one has written, Ghana is not without
post election challenges. If President Kufuor wins the election,
he would be mistaken to interpret the verdict as a vote of
confidence in his government’s performance. Ghanaians still
worry that their economy is too aid-dependent with sixty percent
of the budget coming from external assistance and extreme
poverty still stalking the land. My own assessment listening to
Ghana’s proliferating FM stations and to ordinary people in my
four years of part-residence in Ghana is that the legacies of
authoritarian rule and the search for stability count more for
ordinary Ghanaians than immediate economic gains. But this may
not be for long. As long as many Ghanaians see the shadow of
former President Rawlings lurking in the opposition NDC though,
the likelihood of its victory in presidential election is
remote. The irony is that the NPP government has not necessarily
performed creditably in ensuring the security and safety of
ordinary Ghanaians, especially Ghanaians in the Northern region.
The brazen murder of the local monarch, the Ya Na in Yendi
District, a centre of traditional influence in the Northern
region remains a major source of tension and there are those who
see the NPP as responsible for this, given the prominence of
major NPP figures like Aliu Mahama (current Vice President),
Joshua Hamidu (former National Security Adviser and now High
Commissioner to Nigeria) and Malik Alhassan Yakubu (former
Interior Minister) in the conflict. Indeed, the only area that
witnessed serious conflict during the election was the North,
especially the Bawku constituency where Hawa Yakubu, prominent
civil society activist and ECOWAS Parliamentarian was a
candidate.
Equally, in terms of development, the property owning
democracy and golden age of business that NPP promised Ghanaians
is yet to materialise four years after it came into office.
Generally, the economy is no better than where the NDC left it.
Over the past two decades, market forces have dominated the
economy and this trend has continued with the NPP government.
The economy is reliant on the export of primary products and
thus making it vulnerable to the general shocks of the global
economy including price fluctuations. Further, since the 1990s,
the economy has been characterised by high rates of inflation,
high interest rates, depreciation of the cedi, dwindling foreign
reserves, excessive public debt overhang and stagnant economic
growth, implementation of the Government Poverty reduction
strategy notwithstanding. The real test of NPP’s popularity will
come in 2008 when Kuffuor’s term expires, and the opposition
parties have managed to re-organise themselves.
There are lessons too for other West African countries,
especially the most populous of them all, Nigeria. It is
arguable that elections in Ghana have resulted in enhanced
legitimacy because the chain has remained unbroken since 1992.
Having run the fourth election in an unbroken cycle, the
Electoral Commission in Ghana is regarded as one of the best
managed in the whole of Africa. Its Executive Chairman, Dr
Kwadjo Afari-Gyan and his fellow commissioners have become
well-known elections gurus in the continent, earning the respect
of peers across the board. Sitting in on one of the Commission’s
meetings with political parties, one can understand why. Dr
Afari-Gyan demonstrated a mastery of his brief without being
arrogant, entertained legitimate complaints from the opposition
parties and left all with a clear impression that he was not in
the pocket of any government or opposition party. The challenge
is therefore to organise an Electoral Commission that is truly
independent of Government and wholly accountable to the people.
The Ghanaians can help by sharing their experience with other
West Africans, and since Dr Afari-Gyan is already the
Secretary-General of the Elections Management Bodies in Africa,
there is a platform to achieve this objective. Also, given the
plans by ECOWAS to establish a full Elections Unit in the ECOWAS
Secretariat, that Unit has the specific challenge of assisting
to enhance election management in West Africa, by providing
capacity strengthening initiatives and strictly upholding the
provisions of the Supplementary protocol on Democracy & Good
Governance signed by all Heads of States in West Africa, but yet
to be ratified by majority of these leaders.
Another lesson that West African states should take to heart
is the relevance of freedom of information and the vigilance of
civil society. A major credit for the transparent conduct of the
Ghanaian election goes to the several FM stations dotted around
the country and the vigilance of CODEO – the local domestic
observer mission of 7,000 people. Although some of the FM
stations can be a bit over the top in the use of inelegant
adjectives to describe the President and opposition leaders, but
they feed the public with regular, minute-by-minute updates on
the elections, and in the process prevent potential problems.
They also broadcast provisional election results as soon as
counting is completed at the polling booth and follow this to
the collation centres until final results are delivered. And,
more importantly, they are encouraged to do so by the Electoral
Commission. So, the idea that a result known to everyone at the
local level suddenly produces another winner as it happens in
Nigeria is immediately nipped in the bud.
Finally, what Ghana proves is the importance of distance
between the Electoral Commission and the political leadership in
any state and the confidence that comes from understanding and
surefootedness. We need a better understanding of electoral
geography in all of our countries in West Africa, a factor that
may well be responsible for the fear of election among the
contending parties in Cote d’Ivoire. Two, we should let the
public nominate elections commissioners and subject them to
public scrutiny before Parliament appoints them in our
countries; three, we must fund the electoral body direct from
the Consolidated Account without any interference from the
ruling Government; four, the electoral body must be supported by
an independent bureaucracy, not the regular civil service, and
finally, we must ensure that the electoral law promotes
independent candidacy and proportional representation rather
than winner takes all mentality in our countries where diversity
should be celebrated.
In all of these areas, Ghana is light years ahead of many
West African states but that is really where the greatest hope
lies. Here is a country that was a complete basket case in the
early 1980s and many never thought it could recover from its
abysmal state. It also defies political science theory up to a
point, in that the people are still poor but they value
democracy. Barely two decades later, Ghana is an example and a
beacon of hope for the rest of Africa. African states’ permanent
transition too may yet lead to transformation and I believe that
if the chain remains unbroken in many of our states, we will
improve electoral legitimacy.
Dr Kayode Fayemi is Director, Centre for
Democracy & Development, in Nigeria. |