Editorial

Bring February 28, 1948 lessons to bear on current governance!!

 February 28 has become a very import­ant day in the political history of Ghana since 1948.

On this day 76 years ago, British colonial police opened fire on ex-servicemen, specif­ically World War II veterans, who had organised a peaceful march to present a petition to the then British Governor at the Osu Castle, Gerald Creasy, to demand unpaid gratuity or allowances from the British government.

What has now come to be known as the 28th February Christianborg Crossroads shooting incident led to the killing of Sergeant Adjetey, Corporal Attipoe and Private Odartey Lamptey.

Every year, the State holds a special ceremony at the Free­dom Monument, the location of the shooting incident, near the Black Star Square at Osu, in Accra, in memory of the three Ghanaian World War II veterans, and, by extension, to honour all the war veterans.

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We would continue to en­courage the commemoration of that incident even when all the war veterans leave for eternity.

We, however, think such anniversary will be only ritualistic if it is marked with just parades, wreath-laying and speeches.

We need to immortalise the incident by living the lessons from it, especially with regard to events that led to it and those that followed it.

The incident significantly contributed to the attainment of the country’s political inde­pendence.

Today, the British are gone for 67 years this March, can the country’s leaders claim they have prevented the similitude of what led to the veterans’ protest, which the British interpreted as a riot and as such attempted to quell it with the fatal shooting?

Aren’t our present-day native politicians and other public officials withholding all manner of payments to some people and even calling their bluff in addition?

May yesterday’s commem­oration of the Christianborg Crossroads shooting remind these state officials that one day the victims of their insen­sitive acts can cause uproars that will be supported by the whole nation.

In the face of all the hard­ships in the country now, which duty bearers must address, they sometimes paint a picture that all is rosy.

We can see that there is pent-up anger among the masses, which can explode into an uncontrollable action if only public officials es­pecially continue to flourish while the majority of the people languish in squalor.

Listen to public reactions to provocative remarks made by some swollen-headed politicians and no one should tell you politicians and their cohorts can no longer treat the people as being gullible and take them for a ride.

It will be recalled that short­ly after days of disturbances across the country following the February 28, 1948 inci­dent, the leadership of the United Gold Coast Conven­tion (UGCC), a political party, sent a cable to the Secretary of State for the Colonies in London warning that the situation would get out of control if the colonial govern­ment was not changed for an independent one.

Has independence brought to the country that equality, justice, accountability, and oth­er such values or virtues the incident became a catalyst for?

The Ghanaian Times believes that the commemoration of the 1948 shooting incident is unproductive if its lessons are not brought to bear on the current governance of the country.

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