Coordinator of the Third World Network Africa, Dr. Yao Graham, says Ghanaians, and by extension the African continent, should celebrate its little wins and criticise its shortcomings.
According to him, the constant rhetoric that black people have failed to manage their own affairs is erroneous and should be discouraged.
He explained that while the continent has managed to achieve some development, it has not achieved a lot thus Africans should celebrate what they have achieved and rigorously criticise what they have not.
Speaking on JoyNews’ PM Express, he said, “I think there’s a self-flagellation out there that black people have failed. I don’t think black people have failed. We have not achieved as much as we can, but we have achieved a lot. And what we have achieved is important to celebrate and also rigorously criticise what we have not.”
He added that much of what has not been achieved is largely due to the failure of African leaders to appropriately restructure their economies away from the colonial commodity export dependent model.
“Colonialism was not about development, so if you look across Africa, every African country was left with a raw material commodity export dependent economy. Very little investment in social services, the only infrastructure investment was what was going to get things to the port.
“The economies [were] dominated by small cliques of foreign companies; skills training was based on what was needed by colonialism not to develop our economies,” he said.
According to Dr. Graham, even amidst these shortcomings, it is important to celebrate the little wins in order to keep hope alive.
“If you look at the progress we have made, in terms of literacy, in terms of life expectancy, in terms of infrastructure and so on, we have achieved quite a bit. You should also ask yourself why even the western powers, who unfortunately you simplify and talk about ‘white people’, I don’t think it’s a race issue, it’s an economic relations issue, why do they continuously use Ghana as a reference point? I don’t agree with them, but it is because there is something here which is worth pointing to. I think it is important to celebrate our achievements and then come to say that there is a lot we have not achieved,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
Police vow to arrest South African miners as standoff continues
26 mins -
Togbe Afede XIV livid about state of Ghana’s economy, scandals in government
36 mins -
Top Republican says Trump nominees are ‘disruptors’
46 mins -
Undocumented migrants hope Trump mass deportations only ‘for criminals’
1 hour -
Final phase for mass rape trial that has horrified France
1 hour -
Trump, Musk and new cabinet nominees celebrate at UFC
1 hour -
‘Anointed by God’: The Christians who see Trump as their saviour
2 hours -
‘My parents drove me to raves aged 15’, says Charli XCX
2 hours -
Venezuela frees more than 100 arrested after disputed election result
2 hours -
‘Record breaking’ 60m homes watched Tyson vs Paul fight, Netflix says
2 hours -
GPL 2024/25: Young Apostles hand Samartex first home defeat since March
4 hours -
Unconventional Trump brings openings and perils for Africa
5 hours -
Iseguri Initiative fights teenage pregnancy and early child marriage
5 hours -
Joy Prime’s Made in Ghana Fair closes with high praise
5 hours -
‘Dreams quashed’: Foreign students and universities fear Australia’s visa cap
6 hours