By Akyaaba Addai-Sebo

Who is afraid of “revolution” but NIM? How can you reform a rotten system so designed to serve well “The comfortable living standards of our oppressors…” at the expense of the rest of society? Why lament on the “asymmetric” EBITEYIE-EBINTEYIE DUKADAYA 4TH REPUBLIC demanding change and yet cold to the “Revolutionary Path”?

NIM is lamenting on the vicious “Class Struggle” that “our oppressors” have unleashed on Ghana thereby corrupting every aspect of national life. Ours is a republic of Ebiteyie-Ebinteyie where the ruling Dukadaya Mafioso Cabals, despite the hardships, would not “fast” but “dine on the fortune of generations unborn”. How can NIM seek to reform a corrupt and corrupting 4th Republic that by its own deeds lacks the “capacity for internal reform”?  What do you do to a 4th Republic whose political and economic institutions are programmed to appropriate and exploit the labour and resources of the nation at the expense of the Ebinteyie and to the benefit of those who “create, loot and share for family, friends and foreign partners”?

NIM will expose and oppose the political, economic and moral bankruptcy of the 4th Republic which has turned Ghana into a “neocolony”. But the enigma here is that NIM cannot call for the Dukadaya “oppressors” who run the “failed state” to be removed even by the power of the thumb. NIM would rather be “in the pursuit of a mandate for reform at the level of the legislature and executive” leaving untouched a judiciary that the public look on with a jaundiced eye. And this Dukadaya packed prejudicial judiciary lends legitimacy to the Dukadaya temple of nation wrecking racketeers whose exercise and abuse of power have so traumatised the citizens to the point where “we don’t even realize the contradiction of supping on the “future” of our children, whilst pleading for emancipation at the dining table of our oppressors.”  Yes, we hold the future of the younger generation in the present with trepidation.

This is what happens when governance becomes a syndicated joint-criminal enterprise.

My generation who had it so good under the Nkrumah generation has failed and BETRAYED the younger generation when it came our turn to rule from 1982 to the present. 

 My generation captured power in January 1982 and have exercised absolute power ever since. All we have to show for is the scale and spate of environmental degradation and the corruption of all aspects of national life including that of our children, trapped in pits of survival scavenging for specs of gold for their impoverished parents.

The leadership of my generation sold out, destroyed and left to rot in the bush the industrial, manufacturing agricultural and research and development assets bequeathed to the nation by the Nkrumah generation when teleguided to do so by the World Bank, IMF and US Treasury. By following the diktat of the Washington Consensus my treacherous generation set up the Divestiture Implementation Committee which in effect placed Ghana in a state of permanent unemployment, inflation, debt-trap and under-development by disposing of mass employment generating industries. 

A nation is on the verge of collapse when the vast majority of its youth wake up in the morning with nothing to look forward to.

My generation, as represented by the ruling Dukadaya Mafioso Cabals and their criminal entrepreneurial cartels must be exposed, opposed and deposed by the youth so organised. The youth must study Nkrumah’s I SPEAK FOR FREEDOM and be inspired by how Nkrumah together with the youth organised and mobilised the population against British appropriation and exploitation and forced the British to negotiate a way out. The younger generation can do to the ruling Dukadaya Mafioso Cabals what the NKrumah generation did to the British colonial regime with the benefit of hindsight and collegial organisation.

And yet still, the national anthem calls on the citizens to “resist oppressors’ rule”. Was the 1992 Constitution not “foisted” on the nation to “reform” the PNDC “oppressors’ rule” with all the indemnifying clauses protecting the very “oppressors” from justice? And did the PNDC not murder judges to put the fear of “Junior Jesus” in the judiciary and the population… And that this trauma remains and also with the Ghana Bar Association to this day? 

That, Ghanaians live in a culture of fear is real and I believe this is what informs the NIM “reform and restoration” approach to the challenge of systemic change to “cleanse Our Father’s House” of the ruling Dukadaya Mafioso Cabals gambling and playing musical chairs with the fate of Ghanians entrapped “by an asymmetric global trade … driven by an international monetary system which is heavily weighted in their favour”. Here “their” means those who teleguide the “neocolony ” from the metropolis and “their” masonic temples. 

NIM laments Á LOOTING CONTINUA and yet NIM is scarred stiff of ÁLUTA CONTINUA, the very method that “Junior Jesus” used to overthrow the Nkrumaist Limann regime in January 1982 just like his heroes Kotoka and Harlley used to overthrow the Nkrumah regime in February 1966. Ghana has since not recovered from these two watersheds masterminded by adherents of so-called “Western democracy”. 

NIM desires an omelette and yet frowns at eggs being broken. Sophistry is not the solution required now from NIM. To Free Ghana From The Vice and Stranglehold of Neocolonialsm, The Dukadaya Must Go!!!