MANASSEH’S FOLDER: The undiplomatic diplomat and the hypocrites
The first time I heard about Jon Benjamin was in November 2014. I was in the United States participating in the International Visitors Leadership Programme on Investigative Journalism, but I was constantly monitoring developments back home. When I went online one morning, I was greeted with a needless storm of confusion on social media. There was an outrage against a certain British High Commissioner who had been in Ghana for only six months but would not mind his own business.
The man at the centre of the controversy, Mr. Jon Benjamin, was invited to speak at IMANI Ghana’s10th
anniversary programme. His topic was “Integrity in public office.”
After greeting the audience and other diplomats present, Jon Benjamin
began his speech: “I’m not sure, Franklin [Cudjoe], about what you have
me sitting in: it looks like you are having me enstooled. But, at least,
this chair was definitely made in Ghana.”
This was in reference to the rather
senseless decision by the leadership of our parliament to import MPs’
furniture from China. While in the US, I visited the Senate and I was
shocked to find the senators, including the likes of John McCain, using
desks and simple chairs that looked like what some of our basic school
children use here. While our MPs need comfort, someone should have been
wise enough to give that job to the local manufacturers.
Before Jon Benjamin continued with his
speech, he told the audience the kind of diplomat he was: “Now, I’m a
diplomat and diplomats are sometimes known for speaking without actually
saying anything, at least in public. But that isn’t really my style…”
The speech that followed was a very
impressive one, but what attracted him a barrage of criticisms and
insults was contained in the concluding part of it:
“… But what are we to think when certain
journalists expect the famous “soli” – to cover our events? Isn’t
covering the news actually their job to start with? And, if they aren’t
paid sufficiently for doing so, isn’t that an issue between them and
their employer, rather than ours or anyone else’s problem? And if those
journalists who pride themselves on reporting corruption in others then
ask for unofficial payments themselves, isn’t that just a touch
hypocritical?
“An event or story is either intrinsically
newsworthy or it isn’t: it doesn’t become newsworthy because someone
has paid for it – that isn’t journalism, it’s advertising which is
perfectly legitimate in itself of course but is a different professional
activity. Now, I wonder if any of the media, which report this speech
tomorrow will include these comments of mine about this lack of probity
by some of their own journalistic colleagues? I doubt it but, go on,
surprise me! And at least you now know officially that you will never
receive any soli from the British High Commission!”
At the 2015 end of year news review on Joy
FM and Multi TV, Jon Benjamin’s statement came up when the spotlight
was put on the media. The host of Metro TV’s Good Evening Ghana, Paul
Adom Otchere, revealed that he was the MC at the IMANI event when Jon
Benjamin made that remark. He said he got upset and abandoned his role
as the MC before the programme ended.
If I were Paul Adom Otchere, I would walk
up to Mr. Jon Benjamin after the speech to congratulate him. The media
is one of the most corrupt institutions in Ghana. A majority of the
so-called powerful journalists in our republic are puppets of some of
the most corrupt politicians, government officials and business people.
Paul Adom Otchere knows this. The corruption in the media is worse than
soli. Only hypocrites or those who are ignorant about the canker will
have issues with what Jon Benjamin said.
Two years after his first major
controversy, Jon Benjamin is again the subject of controversy in Ghana.
His tweet, which many Ghanaians consider offensive, has since been
deleted. He said: “Oh, that nasty air outside all of a sudden. Did
someone just inaugurate the harmattan already?”
President Mahama embarked on commissioning
of projects days to the election, an action which earned him the
nickname Commissioner General. It’s a popular social media joke in
Ghana, but Jon Benjamin’s critics say he had no right to take part in
it.
First, they say he is a foreigner who
should not meddle in our internal affairs. This does not make sense
because any time foreign diplomats and government representatives say
something positive about us, we are happy, even when we know it’s
insincere. Our government officials will cause media houses they can
influence to publish such praises. We only complain about interference
and even rehash neo-colonialists theories if their remarks are negative.
This is hypocrisy.
Some critics have also said Ghanaian
ambassadors cannot pass such remarks in Jon Benjamin’s country so he is
disrespecting us. I don’t think this is true. Our top politicians and
ministers of state passed critical comments about US presidential
elections and the candidates. Was that interference? Besides, before we
compare ourselves with the UK and the US and the other countries, which
we often say must stay away from our issues, we should know our
relationships with them.
Ours is a servant-master relationship. We
go there to beg them for money. We beg because our government officials,
business men and highly respected people have, since independence, been
stealing our collective wealth and stashing them in offshore accounts
and buying property in Dubai and the most luxurious places on the
planet. Until we stop begging, we should not expect to be treated as
equals. If your father is a wasteful drunkard who often goes to beg food
from Kofi Manu’s father, you shouldn’t be surprised if Kofi Manu
disrespects you. It is only normal. African leaders have long made us
look stupid in the eyes of the international community and it’s
difficult to fight for them if the disrespect is extended to them.
Another group of critics also think this
is the time to hit hard at those who are perceived to be treating the
Office of the President and its occupant with contempt, for which reason
“outsiders” now have the guts to disrespect the president. They often
refer to the political opponents of the current government and warn that
their party’s president may suffer a similar fate.
This, too, I totally disagree. The first
question such critics should ask themselves is whether the President or
the Office of the President, in recent times, conducted themselves in a
manner that demands respect from the citizens. I don’t subscribe to the
notion that whoever is elected President of Ghana must deserve my
respect. I respect the Office of the President, but whoever occupies
that office must earn my respect. A colleague at work, a woman, once
disagreed with me on this and I asked her whether she respected her
pastor.
“Of course, I do. He’s a man of God,” she emphasised.
“If you returned from work and found your pastor in bed with your 15-year old daughter, would you still respect him?” I asked.
“No, I won’t,” she said.
We must respect people for their
behaviour and character, and not the positions they occupy. Our greatest
flaw as a people is that we hand respect to people who don’t deserve
it. If a thief buys his way into power, we call them honourable. If a
rich criminal is in our church, we give them front rows because of their
wealth. If our pastor is the devil’s direct grandson, we shout, “Touch
not my anointed and do my prophet no harm!”
Our elders say a man does not point to his
father’s house with the left hand, but it is important to ask the type
of father he was before we crucify the son who points to that house with
a left hand. Our sages of old have also taught us that if you call your
calabash worthless, outsiders would use it to fetch rubbish. But if we
want to know the people who have repeatedly called our calabash
worthless and for which reason the likes of Jon Benjamin may have deemed
it fit for rubbish collection, we should not look beyond the Flagstaff
House and the President himself.
I am not very old, but I know that in the
days of President J.J. Rawlings, the Office of the President connoted
dignity. In the days of President J.A. Kufuor, there was an aura of
respect surrounding the President and the Presidency. That started
diminishing when President J.E.A. Mills took over and the likes of Koku
Anyidoho started dismissing top government officials using the name of
the President, who knew nothing about it. In the John Mahama era, it
sunk even lower.
This is the presidency under which the
senseless and fraudulent bus-branding contract was awarded. This is the
presidency that supervised the SADA rot. This is the presidency that
attacked and destroyed the voice recorder of a journalist and when a
petition was submitted to get the official sanctioned and have him
apologise, nothing came out of it. This is the president who, against
the wisdom and counsel of his lawyer, went on to free the three young
men who were imprisoned by the Supreme Court. They had issued death
threats against judges and threatened to rape the Chief Justice of our
republic.
Last year, when 36 people died in a
nightclub fire disaster in Romania, the Prime Minister resigned. When
more than150 people were killed in an avoidable fire and flood disaster
in Ghana, the mayor who supervised the floods said he would not
apologise to anybody. The President did nothing to him. The mayor kept
his job and was later supported to win a parliamentary election. The
only person who was arrested by the BNI over the deaths was a young man
who was alleged to have smoked a cigar and thrown the tub in the
floodwater.
This is the presidency that became a
dumping ground for officials alleged to have misconducted themselves and
soiled themselves in allegations of corruption. This is the president
who told his ministers not to accept a pesewa or a pin from a business
entity but went ahead to accept a Ford Expedition from a Burkinabe
contractor who was winning questionable contracts in our republic.
The presidency is now like a man who took
his goat to the Bolga market with a cheap price tag but expected the
buyer to quote a high price for the animal. That is impossible.
If I knew Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to
be a thief, I will not respect him today because he has been elected
president of the land. I respect him today because of what he has stood
for in the past. If he occupies the highest office of the land on
January 7 and messes up, I cannot respect him.
As a country, if we want to be treated
with respect and dignity, let’s fix our mess. The likes of Jon Benjamin
know more about the ills of our society and the crimes of our hallowed
government officials than the average minister of state or intelligence
officer in this country knows. In the speech he delivered six months
after arriving in Ghana, he stated that: “What people at the top do in
any organization or system sets an important tone. Another African
proverb I really like is that: “a fish rots from its head”.
Our country is rotten and our leaders are
complicit in the rot. We must not be happy when foreign diplomats praise
us, but send nasty classified reports about us to their home countries.
Jon Benjamin gives us a fair idea of what the international community
thinks about us. It’s time to confront the reality because if our
hypocrisy had been helpful, our country would have, by now, been a super
power.
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The writer, Manasseh Azure Awuni, is
a senior broadcast journalist with Joy 99.7 FM. His email address is
azureachebe2@yahoo.com. The views expressed in this article are his
personal opinions and do not reflect, in any form or shape, those of The
Multimedia Group, where he works.
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