IS GHANA SERIOUS?
“Dear Doc, this is something small
for your hard work. It is not a bribe. Take it and relax. In Ghana, everybody
‘chops’ from his work side.”
That was a note attached to a check,
issued by a medical superintendent, as a bribe, intended for the director of
the NHIA clinical audit team, during an audit at the Essikado District Hospital
in the Western region. Dr. Ametewee had defrauded the NHIA to a sum of GHS
415,000.00!
In barely a month, Ghana would be fifty
eight solid years since independence. As a country, guess what? We keep waking
to more disappointments. Currently, it is the reign of arson. It as though
Ghana just discovered another use of fire!
It was quite disappointing when we
all awoke to the so-called fire outbreak at the Tema central medical stores.
Imagine all the medical supplies supposed to be harboured by this structure,
and yet, somehow, it got razed.
Again, let us talk about the fire outbreak
at the Tamale Teaching Hospital laboratory store, not forgetting the fire
outbreak at the ECG warehouse. How many millions of cedi was lost?
Can we forget the incidence of fraud at
the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital pharmacy?
Let us not forget the ghost names
saga, within the National Service Scheme. 22,612 ghost names! Do you know that
this country loses about GHS 94,970,400 each year to undeserved allowances due
to these ghost names?
And this is being perpetrated by ordinary
Ghanaians! It would be quite interesting to know the total amount of money this
nation has lost, in just these above mentioned incidents. And what has been the
punishment for such wicked people?
Can you imagine the sums of
state-owned cash that disappear in similar or diverse ways on a daily basis through
our ports and harbours, borders, checkpoints, offices, both governmental and
non-governmental, to mention a few? The real thieves live with us, and yet we
all so readily arrest and tag others as thieves!
These thieves are our grandfathers
and grandmothers, fathers and mothers, uncles and aunties, brothers and
sisters, nephews and nieces, husbands and wives, in-laws, friends and acquaintances,
colleagues, church members, church leaders, social or political leaders, or
even neighbours. They are family! Anyone who takes what belongs to others
without the knowledge or permission of the owner is a thief!
Talk about the ordinary city guards
positioned within our central business districts, for only God knows what. These
so-called city guards parade around like vultures, looking out to prey. What
are their roles? Must this country continue paying people for no work done? We clothe
them in uniform, only for them to extort us! Are we serious?
As always, our gallant policemen and policewomen
cannot be ruled out. Visit the various police check points, and you will never be
disappointed. The numerous pockets on their uniforms are serving other purposes.
At one of these checkpoints quite recently, it was an interesting sight as I
watched one police officer, move to a shed, and immediately, started emptying
the contents of his day’s labour. Your guess is as good as mine. Are we
serious?
Whenever we think of corruption,
everyone quickly looks up our political ladder. We only consider politicians to
be corrupt. But guess what? Corruption in this nation is most rotten, towards
the base! Those at the bottom of the hierarchy are more corrupt. We parade
ourselves as middle or even low income earners, either as ordinary government
or private workers, until we get caught and make news headlines. And yet, we would
only too readily point accusing fingers at our leaders. Are we serious?
Would Ghana ever solve this problem
of corruption? In the new Ghana, arson has become the cover-up for
embezzlement! Ghanaians are now setting fire to government properties as a cover
to their crimes; the gross embezzlements, stealing, misappropriations, to
mention but a few. Is Ghana serious?
This is the question we should be
asking ourselves each day. Clearly, not all Ghanaians are corrupt, but again, majority
is corrupt, and majority is being corrupted daily. The monies being lost are
monies taken from the ordinary tax-payer. How then, and for how long, must we
sit and watch as these monies keep getting wasted? What happens to those who
get nabbed by the law? More stringent measures must be sought and enforced!
Quite recently, Pope Francis I, in
his address to some catholic religious said, “We are all sinners, but not all are corrupt. Sinners are to be
accepted, but not the corrupt.”
By inference, we sin because we are
weak, but WE ARE CORRUPT BECAUSE WE ARE
WICKED. CORRUPTION IS EVIL! The
one who offers a bribe, and the one who receives this bribe, are both culpable!
Anna Esi Hanson (nnhanson2@yahoo.com
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