NPP slams John Mahama for politicising Volta floods | AM Newspaper Review

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Transcript
00:00 Welcome back on the AM show. Time now for us to get into the papers. This Tuesday
00:04 morning and we kick-start by letting you know that Endpoint Homeopathic Clinic is
00:10 calling. They sponsor this segment and they are offering you, if you're a man,
00:14 prostate screening for free. If you're a woman, fertility screening for free. Now
00:19 here's where you can locate them across the length and breadth of the country.
00:23 Here in Accra, Spentex offers the Shell signboard. Kumasi, Kroduma, we're here
00:27 behind the Angel Educational Complex. There's Takra, the Anaji State, Tema
00:31 Community 22, Techiman, Hansua and Asiama and Zema. Their call lines, if you care to
00:37 call, which I think you should, 0244 867 068 or 0274 234 321. Endpoint Homeopathic
00:51 Clinic, the end to chronic disease. But just the start of the news review and I
00:55 have joining me in the studio, Afel Boni. He is former president of the Ghana
01:00 Journalists Association. Good morning. You look, as always, fabulous. Is it the
01:06 same tailor, your designer? Yes, Oman. The young man? Yeah, young man, Oman.
01:12 We'll give Oman his props for always decking you out in fabulous colours. Thank
01:17 you. And exquisite tailoring. Thank you. Well, here we are. Like I would usually
01:23 do, I'd like to find out what you've thought about some of the stories that
01:26 have taken place over the last few weeks or the last week, actually. There's also
01:31 Akosombo still on our radar. But I'm curious, for the first time, if not ever,
01:37 the Ghana Journalists Association is going to have its awards program and
01:42 it's going to be held in the day. On Sunday. Yes, yes. And it's not going to be
01:49 the usual night time. There are a few changes here and there. What do you think
01:54 about the new, I wouldn't say seismic shifts, but new things happening in the
01:59 Ghana Journalists Association? It's good to innovate. It's good to think outside
02:03 the box. Many of those will be complaining about the late night events.
02:11 Sometimes they even travel to the wee hours of the morning. Yeah. And
02:16 before you get to realize who was journalist of the year. And we tried it
02:21 once. We did it at 10 o'clock in the morning and people were complaining. And
02:27 they came back to us. How on earth can anyone eat dinner in the morning? It's
02:36 supposed to be a dinner something. So we're compelled to go back to the evening
02:41 and the complaints were still... And the fact is, it's not within the bounds of
02:45 possibility to please everybody. Right. And this is the first time in the history of
02:49 the GGA that the event will be held on Sunday. Yeah. And in the afternoon. At that time of day.
02:54 Yeah, 3 p.m. So let's see how it will end. Yeah. Well, I think, well, it's a weekend.
03:01 So weekend. Not many people actively working. Though some do now because of
03:06 virtual work. I mean people still do some stuff on Sunday. And again, the time.
03:11 Anybody would have probably gone to church. Church and all that. So we'll see how it balances.
03:18 Yes, indeed. Any other story? Anything that has caught your attention
03:23 over the last week that you'd like to briefly share with us before we get into
03:26 the papers? The dominant story, this village and its untold hardship. It has
03:33 inflated on thousands of people. The water, eating. And we are told that in
03:41 part of the Brown, Brown African region and and the. Partisan. Rhetoric, rhetoric,
03:51 back and forth banter. Yes. And the fake news and the fake news. Yeah. So I think
03:58 it's the time to dial back. The escalating remarks, comments and to scale up efforts
04:09 to assuage the suffering of the people in the affected areas. And one story, which is
04:17 banned in one of the newspapers, the MPP is accusing former President Rawlings of,
04:24 former President Mahama. Right. Yeah. For putting a partisan slant on the crisis
04:32 or disaster. And this will not, you know. I don't know which one you're referencing
04:40 though, because there was talk about if it had been in the Ashanti region or
04:44 something. And apparently it's fake news. Are you aware of that? I'm not aware of
04:49 that. I think even I saw Kuku Anyidu who posted and people went after him because
04:55 it had come to the fore that that news was not credible. In fact, I believe the
04:59 former president's own page on Twitter or one of his social media pages had put
05:04 it out clearly that it was fake news and that that had never been added. I just
05:08 don't know whether that is the same. Daily Guide has captured the story.
05:14 Maybe we can get into it so we can cut into it because it says here the banner headline
05:20 MPP slams Mahama for politicizing Volta flats. So let's see whether it's related to that story.
05:26 The flag bearer of the opposition, NDC, and his party executives have been slammed for
05:30 politicizing flood victims misery by the MPP after they used the issue to criticize the
05:36 government. Severe flooding has hit some areas in Volta and eastern regions in towns and
05:40 villages along the lower Volta enclave affected after a spillage from the Akoso and
05:46 Angpong dams. Let me cut to where he is quoted. I think I need to get to the end of this story.
05:54 It is clear that the scope and scale of the flooding of communities along the Volta River
05:58 is bigger than our crippled economy can bear. I recommend to the government, so this is what
06:04 is quoted here. I'll read it to you so that we react. It is clear that the scope and scale of
06:10 the flooding of communities along the Volta River is bigger than our crippled economy can bear.
06:15 I recommend to the government to declare a state of emergency in the affected areas. So that's
06:20 something else I'd like you to reflect on. State of emergency should we declare that article 31
06:25 and the emergency act from our bilateral and multilateral partners and request relief
06:31 assistance from our bilateral and multilateral partners immediately. This is said to have been
06:38 on Facebook. Let me see whether there are any other quotes. So responding to that, Mr. Ahiamba,
06:45 we all know him, he's for the MPP, stated that the MPP will not allow the opposition to use
06:49 ethnocentric remarks to sow discord and instability in the country. It says, quote,
06:54 the idea that government will stand aloof and have people suffer is something that I cannot fathom,
06:59 but that was the notion the NDC and its flag bearer was advancing in the Volta region,
07:03 creating the impression government didn't care about them and it was painful. So this is what
07:09 is quoted here. Because the other thing I saw, I could pull it up, was something else that
07:16 I think suggested an ethnic slant, which has been debunked and I'm yet to see any video or
07:23 audio evidence that suggests that this was said. But from what is said here, I recommend to the
07:31 government to declare a state of emergency in the affected areas and request relief assistance from
07:37 our bilateral and multilateral partners immediately. And then it is clear that the scope and scale of
07:43 the flooding of communities along the Volta River is bigger than our crippled economy can bear.
07:47 These are the quotes I see here. And it also says, maybe let me just add, because I want to get all,
07:56 he pointed out that when the unfortunate incident happened, the NDC was in the Volta region
08:00 campaigning and telling the people that, quote, because they are averse, the government will not
08:04 support them. And this I see to be unfortunate. But this statement itself has been debunked.
08:09 But of course, you know how the politics is in this country from both sides, the NPP and the NDC.
08:14 Your reflections. I think partisanship should not come into play in this disaster at all.
08:21 And the tendency to refract almost every issue in partisan lessons should be dazzled.
08:30 It's if anything, it's it's it's worse since the plight of of the victims. And what the two parties
08:39 end up in doing is the perpetration of sorrow, the deepened sorrow of people who are really
08:46 and who are weeping, gnashing their teeth and who have lost almost everything they've fought for
08:54 since they came on it. So the two parties, please, this is a time to think of how best to mobilize
09:00 resources, how best to ensure that we find a permanent solution to this crisis. And
09:08 global warming is a reality now, whether we like it or not. The script has flipped entirely as far
09:18 as the weather pattern is concerned. So in all likelihood, this will be OK as the rains fall in
09:26 torrents. So the time has come to think outside the box, to find a lasting solution, long term
09:32 solution to what is happening so that we need to come back to this crisis year in, year out.
09:38 Yesterday I had a conversation with engineer Abdullahi Mahama, Seji Saji, who is with
09:44 NADMO and some other stalwarts, Bernard Mona, who has also been on the ground. And,
09:49 you know, the picture painted while there are solutions that have been profited and while
09:54 other countries have also done things with hydro dams and all of that, I just didn't get the feeling
10:02 that we would find any resolution to this matter anytime soon. That was the feeling I got because
10:09 Abdullahi Mahama, while he may not be a dams expert, he's a road building consultant. He
10:17 puts certain ideas forth. And the reality, too, if we allow the dam to be breached,
10:22 that could be disastrous. Entire communities, some parts of certain regions could go under.
10:28 The death toll could be staggering. Entire communities could be washed away underneath,
10:33 like you would see the the Volta Lake or the river. Sometimes you would see stilts,
10:38 you know, stumps, you know, entire. And it's not something we can even fathom. It's not
10:44 an emergency that I think our country is ready to deal with. We're simply not there. We cannot
10:50 deal with a disaster like that. But in this instance, something has happened. And if we
10:56 have to continue with the cycle, you see, we're knee jerk reacting people. We like for the thing
11:01 to happen that, oh, it's not happened in 50 years. So we didn't expect it. Or last year,
11:07 we expected some of this. It didn't happen. So this year and then it happens. We are so reactionary
11:14 and it becomes problematic. I don't know, but I just get the feeling that we're not going to see
11:19 the end of this anytime soon. So if you square this against the logic of climate change, it
11:25 reinforces the need for something more serious. You know, instead of emergency, I'm not a technical
11:32 person, but I think the cause, you know, have been more silent for the declaration of state
11:39 of emergency. I believe this will give the states the necessary legislative powers to intervene more
11:45 effectively as far as this disaster is concerned. So I think it should still be on the board for
11:53 consideration. I will just look at what Samuel Okoku, our New Deho post said. He spoke about
11:59 the president talking about if it's a question of who votes for me or who doesn't vote for me,
12:03 then I shouldn't be here because you didn't vote for me. But that is not my concern. And in any
12:07 event, one day you will vote for me and my party. That's the president. He puts it side by side with
12:11 what the former president purportedly said, which has been debunked. So debunked. So I want to just
12:17 clearly quote it for you. "Akufuaru does not want to come to the Volta region to inspect the havoc
12:23 of the spillage. If it were the Ashanti region, he would have rushed there. However, it's not human
12:28 beings to Ashanti is more human than Everest." And that is the quote that has been debunked. And
12:35 like I said, I am yet to see any video or audio evidence supporting that. So.
12:41 Certainly such comments are toxic and as media practitioners, we should not amplify them.
12:50 We should not at all. Definitely not. Definitely not. While in this case,
12:55 we are being informed that it is fake for future purposes, we should, because there are times when
12:59 they have gone on that trajectory. Our political parties, they have gone on that trajectory in the
13:04 past. Asantini, Esremuni, this and that. All the "nini" is not necessary. When you cut that person,
13:11 will blood flow? Will the blood be red? Not at all. It will be same just as everybody else. But
13:18 again, gatekeeping on the part of the media. Gatekeeping on the part of the media.
13:25 And then none of those toxic comments should allow to find space in the media.
13:29 So they should be, they should be dazzled. In fact, they belong to the dazzling and
13:32 we should ensure that they remain there. Daniel Coleman says, "Watching the show live from
13:41 AHA for Kenya, scene number two, Jericho." You know, one thing I like about Ghana,
13:45 you'll find all kinds of places here. You'll find Hong Kong. You'll find Russia. Jerusalem.
13:52 I don't know whether there's not Galilee. I think I may have Jericho and all of that.
13:56 I think it's Kaswa Galilee. Hey, Ghana. You don't need to travel anywhere. You just need to find
14:05 Galilee in Ghana. Jerusalem in Ghana. La Paz. Bolivia. Bolivia. Yes. Yes. Anyway.
14:12 So let's get into the papers now. Let's start with you. What papers do you have?
14:17 The Finder and the Daily Statesman and the Economy Times.
14:23 Okay. I have the Ghanaian Times Daily Guide and Punch newspaper. Over to you.
14:29 The Daily Statesman has a story on the front page which announces that the
14:37 Water and River Authority has set aside 20 million cities to assuage the suffering of victims
14:45 of the dam spillage. This figure came across at the weekend and we are told that they've spent
14:56 nine million out of the 20 million cities and we are still looking at how best to
15:02 rally to the aid of the flood victims. And we commend them for...
15:12 The fact is that we already did not anticipate the magnitude of the disaster.
15:16 No, they did not.
15:17 They did not.
15:17 I think they missed something in there because of course, but you see, it's also about control
15:22 mechanisms. And if we're not careful, if like I said, if the dam is breached, even neighbouring
15:27 countries will be affected. And now we would have caused a humanitarian disaster or crisis
15:34 in different parts of the sub-region. But the fact still remains that yes, they knew.
15:42 Sometimes too, it's like Engineer Mahama pointed out to me yesterday, it's about the volumes of
15:46 water upstream coming down towards the dam, which you cannot technically fully gauge or comprehend,
15:54 you know, no matter how good your forecast is. Which is why maybe empty dams, which could,
16:00 the tributaries could be channelled to or whatever, could be options. But I want to
16:06 believe that we would do something like that. But I am almost certain on the back of flooding
16:12 every year in Accra, for example, that we'll talk a lot about it. Policymakers and engineers will,
16:19 oh, listen, that maybe even brilliant proposals will come forth. We may do nothing and God forbid,
16:25 it may come again and we'll start talking about it. That's what doesn't make sense about our
16:28 country.
16:29 Not at all. It's an indictment on our sense of planning and it is a time to apply science and
16:35 technology into too. And this disaster can be a blessing in disguise. So it will help us to
16:43 think outside the box and find a long-term solution. Because as we've said and it's best
16:53 repeating, that climate change will induce more swillages and thus also inflate more
17:01 damages and suffering on the people. So the time has come to find a permanent solution.
17:07 Let's get into other stories.
17:09 So we have Ghana Water, a serious corporation, Ghana Water Company Limited.
17:17 Here they've targeted 203 million cedis as revenue. The managing director of the company,
17:25 Mr Clifford Breiman, said the company is expected to generate 203 million cedis as revenue by the
17:35 end of this year, representing a 65 percent surge from the 2022 revenue generated. I know Ghana
17:46 is a major imperimental block to the progress of the company in certain areas because of
17:53 the calamity they cannot even treat waterless alone, you know, distribute. So whilst we
18:00 commend them for the revenue target, we also need to ensure that we deal
18:12 surgically with the cancer of Ghalam Sey. And this is beyond them. And even the whole state
18:20 machinery is struggling to solve this problem. So, and the media. So this reinforces the need
18:27 for the media to always be put on the front burner and set the agenda by agitating for more action
18:36 to deal surgically with the issue of Ghalam Sey. And the Finder has a story,
18:43 a major story is on what a Ghana Water Company posting 904 million losses in six months.
18:52 This and I have alluded to that, that they are struggling in certain areas and
19:01 certain issues are beyond their control. Ghalam Sey is a dominant one. And so again,
19:09 it's a call to all stakeholders to have this critical situation to overcome its challenges.
19:15 The other important story here, multinationals show little interest to train and equip
19:21 locales in oil and gas sector. And this is coming from the sector minister,
19:27 popularly known as NAPO. - But there are supposed to be laws on that.
19:32 - Local content laws. - So even when they come,
19:36 I don't want to mention any MNC's name, but there's supposed to be the transfer of technical
19:42 know-how, knowledge over time, so that locals can also increase their numbers and their know-how.
19:49 But you see, you can't do this in other parts of the world. Why? Because the systems work. And if
19:55 you breach the system, they'll crack the whip. Here, the whip is lost. There's nothing to crack.
20:02 So the sector minister getting up to say they are not, it's like taxes. Celine Dion has a song about
20:10 love, tax, and everything. And some of those things that are very certain. In other jurisdictions,
20:15 people would want to flout tax. Anybody would want to dodge tax if they had the way of doing that.
20:21 Why do they not do it in those jurisdictions? Because when you are caught, the consequences
20:26 are damning, damaging, and you would end up paying through the nose for it.
20:31 Just as in this instance, if the mechanisms are in place, you will not breach. But the
20:36 mechanisms are not in place, so they will find ways of breaching them. It's like preaching to
20:40 the choir. - Certainly, and they say that Ghana is so deficient in laws, but what we lack is the
20:47 power to implement them. And it is sad that even in the area of welding, the percentage of Ghanaians
20:56 in that sector is miniscule as compared to Nigerians. So with agent promptitude, we need to
21:04 reverse the trend. And it's not enough to point out our deficiencies, our lack of action. What is
21:13 most important is to ensure that Ghanaians capture the commanding height of our oil industry after
21:21 60 years of oil discovery in this country. - And after what? How many years of real exploration?
21:28 From around 2010? - Yeah. - There are about 2008, 2010, getting into... So we are gradually,
21:35 another thing, food for thought. We've done close to 15 years of proper oil exploration in our
21:41 country. And maybe we should also be sitting down and asking ourselves, after 15 years, what has oil
21:47 done for us? We haven't fallen to the Dutch disease, which is the resource curse that some people will
21:54 talk about. But then again, you look at what the real booms are of exploring oil. You would have
22:00 thought that with oil market prices rising on the back of the Russo-Ukrainian war and everything,
22:06 we could have called some shots internally and said, "Oh, we'll do this and do that." But we're
22:11 toothless. We can't do anything. Our oil production is not akin to maybe the Angolas and the Nigerians.
22:19 But our local fuel, that's the question. - Our production levels are significant as
22:25 compared to others. - I'm just saying that while it's significant, it may not be comparable to
22:30 Libya or Nigeria or Angola, the big players. But we are still big. What are we doing with
22:39 those resources? And even some of our petroleum revenue, where they should end up per the law?
22:44 So you see why sometimes it becomes difficult. Like you said, policies are there.
22:49 - But one area in which our resources have been put to most effective use is free SHS.
22:58 Free SHS is one area where Ghanaians are benefiting from our oil resources.
23:05 And experts have been calling for long-term funding for... - And that is the problem. How
23:16 it's going to be. Its sustainability, which has been brought into question by a number of academics
23:22 and CSOs and others. We'll just see. Because policies without sustainability, something to
23:30 roll them out. Which again brings me to parts of the world like Norway. They have some funds for
23:37 future generations for their oil wealth and all of that. Sometimes you just ask yourself what our
23:42 planning is for the future. It appears we have even the food of the future we are consuming now.
23:48 So you ask yourself, because the next generation will come and deal with harsher climate change.
23:54 They'll come and deal with worse flooding. They may experience earthquakes. They may have
24:00 world-shifting problems to deal with. Not even may, they will have those to deal with.
24:09 Our financial status as a country is in a bubble. So you ask yourself, what are we leaving for the
24:15 next generation? Cocoa farms, for example, are going. The South Americans at a point,
24:21 because of some diseases, I don't know whether it's swollen shoot or whatever, Brazil was once
24:25 the second largest producer of cocoa. They see that they are coming back. And do you know what
24:31 advantage they have? Swathes of land. And one farmer can farm vast areas. Here we have small
24:40 acre. And our productivity levels have dwindled by a lot, partly on the back of the RMZ. So you
24:46 look at the future and you ask yourself, what future are we handing over to that generation?
24:50 So the future looks bleak. And it's not a basket case. So it's up to the policy makers,
25:01 implementers, and all of us to ensure that we secure the future for the present and future
25:06 generations. Let me quickly do two papers and then I'll let you come in with the Economy Times
25:13 as we wrap. The Ghanaian Times, upstream petroleum sector deputy speaker slams low local input after
25:20 10 years of local content law passage. So you see exactly what we are talking about. Local content
25:26 law passed a decade after passage. Yet we are talking about low local input. Now who caused that?
25:34 We caused that. Military personnel not withdrawn from MEPA operations. That's according to the
25:39 Ghana Armed Forces. Naval Captain Labi there speaking. You know there was talk about
25:44 their evacuation and then there was a counter from the Ghana Armed Forces. There was some
25:50 redeployment but others were still on the ground doing the work. We need to train more specialist
25:55 doctors in Ghana. Professor Adanu appeals to government. That story on page three.
26:00 And 493,400 visually impaired persons lack white cane. White cane. The white cane. You know this
26:09 story has been and let's not restrict it because I think many years ago the same story came to the
26:15 fore. And here we are again with these same, I mean, and these are the vulnerable ones in our society.
26:23 Who speaks for them? Who advocates for them? Let me go to page 13 and just quickly do those stories.
26:27 I'll be the only one from the Ghanaian times. So the rector of the Ghana College of Physicians
26:33 and Surgeons, Professor Richard Adanu, has appealed to government for support in its quest to double
26:38 the training of specialist doctors for the country. According to him, though the rate of production of
26:43 specialists in the country has seen much improvement following the establishment of the college 20
26:47 years ago, the numbers did not meet the needs or requirements of the country. Quote, "When we look
26:52 at the numbers, one of the reasons the college was set up was because of the slow production
26:57 of medical specialists in the country. And over the past 20 years, the rate of production is much
27:03 better than it was when the college was set up. So in that sense, the college has been successful.
27:08 However, if you look at the number of specialists in relation to our population, we are still not
27:14 getting the mud that we need to." And this is the issue, especially with a lot of, you know,
27:20 our specialist doctors. I have a friend, specialist, she's left the country. And there are many others,
27:27 many others like her, UK, US, Australia, Canada. The other one is the 493,000, that is 40%
27:36 of Ghana's visually impaired population who do not own a white cane, thereby inhibiting their
27:43 mobility and social inclusion. And statistics from the 2021 census indicate that 1.2 million
27:51 out of the 30.8 million population have varying degrees of visual impairment from total blindness
27:56 to slight visual impairment. This is the situation. I have a friend, thankfully,
28:01 Nkrumah. I was speaking with him recently. He was called to the bar recently. He's visually
28:08 impaired. I remember when he had to get into Makola and some of the things I had to personally do.
28:14 We support these people. And when they get to that point, it is brilliant because they can,
28:20 imagine if he didn't even have a white cane. And sometimes, you know, I remember in law school at
28:26 Lagon, he would have a friend, a colleague, you know, holding him and bringing him. But we can
28:31 do better. We can. We can, certainly, yes. So Nkrumah should serve as a beacon of hope
28:37 for people in such situations. The Daily Guide, I think I've done the major story there. MPP slams
28:44 Mahama for politicising vaulter flats and debunks the fake news aspect of it. There's court directs
28:50 OSB to respond to Bisiu's objection. I'm talking about Charles Bisiu, formerly of the Interministerial
28:56 Committee on Illegal Mining. And First Sky group storms MEPEC with goodies and insurance. Any other
29:02 stories to wrap? There's a story by Economy Times quoting the Bank of Ghana as reporting
29:11 that availability of jobs in the country has risen slightly in August 2023.
29:21 The figures quoted in total are 2,775 job adverts as compared to 2,467 for the same period in 2022.
29:37 Our prayer is simply this. This should crystallise into availability of jobs
29:44 for the seeming unemployed in this country. We are told it's a time bomb waiting to explode.
29:52 We should always bear at the back of our minds that the youth are a preponderant force
30:00 which can make or not make this country. By 2050 it is said that our youthful population
30:06 will be far above 50%. What are we preparing for them by way of jobs, by way of a future?
30:12 So we should sharpen our focus on their needs in order to save this country from
30:18 explosion and impollution. Afel Mone, thank you as always for joining us. It's a huge pleasure.
30:28 Making this so enjoyable, animating it for us. We're very grateful for your time, sir. Welcome.
30:34 Afel Mone is former president of the Ghana Journalists Association. He joined us for this
30:39 conversation. For all of you who joined the conversation today, we're grateful to you for
30:44 making the time to be with us every morning. For those of you celebrating, I beg your pardon,
30:49 celebrating anything today, it could be an anniversary, special day, it could be a birthday.
30:56 If it's your birthday, happy birthday to you out there. If it's a special anniversary,
31:00 you're celebrating. Well, enjoy the day and make the most of it. Life is crucial. Don't take it
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32:10 disease. But let's talk sports now. A whole lot in that world. Coming up next with Muftau
32:17 Nabila Abdullahi. Do stay.
32:19 [Music]

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