/ 4 December 2000

Ghana poll ends the Rawlings era

OWN CORRESPONDENT, Accra | Monday

WHEN Ghanaians go to the polls later this week, they will mark the end of an era: nearly two decades of uninterrupted rule by Jerry John (“JJ”) Rawlings, one of Africa’s most colourful leaders.

The man who won over the country when, as a dashing young flight lieutenant, he seized power in a 1981 coup then legitimised his rule through democratic elections in 1992, must now take a constitutional exit after 19 years at the helm.

Rawlings will remain life chairman of the party he formed, the National Democratic Congress (NDC), after passing the baton to his vice president of four years, John Atta Mills, who faces a stiff challenge from the main opposition candidate, John Kufuor of the New Patriotic Party, in Thursday’s elections.

Born in Accra in 1947 of a Ghanaian mother from the Ewe tribe and a Scotsman who abandoned her, Rawlings joined the air force as a cadet at the age of 20.

Enraged at the steady impoverishment of his country – which in the early 20th century was Africa’s most prosperous colony thanks to its wealth of cocoa, gold and timber – Rawlings blamed the generals who had taken over Ghanaian politics since independence leader Kwame Nkrumah was overthrown in 1966.

In May 1979, Rawlings led an abortive mutiny of junior officers and was jailed. The upstart was set free from prison by other officers, and in June 1979, Rawlings and company overthrew the ruling Supreme Military Council in a widely popular coup.

Rawlings had eight generals, including three former military rulers, Akwasi Afrifa, Ignatius Acheampong and Frederich Akuffo, shot by firing squad, and established the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council.

Rawlings led the council as Ghana’s temporary head of state from June to September 1979 when he ceded power to an elected civilian regime led by northern conservative Hilla Limann.

This government lasted until JJ’s second successful coup, which he staged on New Year’s Eve, 1981.

Over the next two years Ghana’s economy nose-dived and its human rights record deteriorated under Rawlings’ socialist Provisional National Defence Council, prompting the Bretton Woods institutions to make a firm stand for reforms.

Now Rawlings stands ready to become an African statesman to be remembered more as an icon of democracy than as a ruthless strongman. – AFP