It
seems as a country, we have somewhat perfected the art of making allegations
against people and the offices they occupy even when we have little or no proof
of the very things we allege. That, practice, commonly found on the Ghanaian political
turf has eaten deep into the country’s sporting arena. It is unfortunate some of
us in the media who often initiate and additionally fan some of these allegations
haven’t yet recognized the damaging work we are doing not only to some
honourable people and their offices but also the entire populace.
Let
me make it clear that under no circumstance will I defend wrongdoing or corrupt
practices that come up in our football circles or our sports in general. It is
necessary however to stress, that, it is unacceptable the levels we are taking wild
allegations of wrongdoing against authorities at the Ghana Football Association
(GFA) and the Youth and Sports Ministry to, and yet, we don’t seem to have the
spine to substantiate those allegations.
A
case in point is the so-called US$20million World Cup budget.
For
weeks now, so much has been said about the budget, which is believed to be
around the figure quoted above and which many people argue is too much for a
country that has serious economic difficulties. That Ghana has dire economic
challenges is a fact no reasonable, sincere Ghanaian living under the harsh conditions
here will deny.
Living
conditions in the country are increasingly worsening. If the government has any
means to reduce or minimize the hardships Ghanaians are facing, it must be
encouraged to do its best.
Added
to that, all efforts must be made to protect the public purse from frivolous
expenditure. I however don’t think any money reasonably demanded and justifiably
spent on the Black Stars’ participation at the FIFA World Cup in Brazil can be
termed as frivolous.
Listening
to all the talk on the World Cup budget; from what has been published by
sections of the media to the commentaries by football fans and remarks made by
the Youth and Sports Minister, Elvis Afriyie Ankrah, I have come to the
conclusion that, there is so much ado about nothing.
First
of all, where is the World Cup budget? Who has it? How much is Ghana likely to
spend on the global football competition? Who will formally make the budget
public? I ask these questions against the backdrop that, no single individual
has been courageous to say exactly how much the World Cup budget is. We keep
hearing it is US$20million. Is it actually US$20million? What has been put in
the budget that makes the figure US$20million?
Why
the rash? Where from all the heat? People have been comparing the World Cup
budget of other countries to that of Ghana at the time these same people have
been unable to even tell us exactly what went into the budgets of those
countries and indeed what went into that of Ghana. I won’t hold brief for
anybody at the Ghana Football Association or the Ministry of Youth and Sports
but here is the tragedy of this country.
We
are quick to making judgement on issues, events and even people without
assembling the facts to arrive at reasonable conclusions. We like to blow hot
air; get the uninitiated on our side and pursue a needless agenda. Is that how
we forever want to go? I put that question directly to those who have been
running with the allegations of corruption against the GFA and the Sports
Ministry.
Unless
those piling the unnecessary pressure on the GFA and the Sports Ministry have
definite figures; unless they can tell us what exactly is in the budget; unless
they have found something fishy somewhere; something venal; unless they can pinpoint
palpable waste of Ghanaian tax payers’ money; unless they have something else
to say apart from the noise they are already making; I advise that they give
the whole nation a break!
A passionate Black Stars supporter conjures magic for the team |
The
practice of invariably thriving on half-baked truths and baseless allegations
to carelessly run people down must stop. It doesn’t serve the interest of
Ghana. It rather denigrates people. It exposes some of Ghana’s reputable
offices to unnecessary ridicule. And we hurt Ghana, not the people or the public
offices they hold. When the FA and the Sports Ministry officials returned from
Brazil recently, I gathered through media interviews, that, the World Cup budget
has been sent to the Ministry for transfer to the President and to cabinet for
scrutiny.
Then
it will be approved and after which it will be made public. In fact, that is
what the Sports Minister said this week. So where exactly is the problem? Where
is the corruption being alleged? Don’t we believe what the Minister said? If so
we should say so with tangible reasons. Why are we becoming experts at leveling
allegations against people just like that? Can a whole World Cup budget be kept
away from the Ghanaian public? Is that possible?
Let
us reason constructively. That is what Ghana needs. The debate about the World
Cup budget so far has been pointless – a struggle over nothing. I suggest that
we hold onto all the commentaries until the budget comes out so we can make
informed analysis.
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