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- <text id=93CT1700>
- <title>
- Ghana--History
- </title>
- <history>
- Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
- Northern Africa
- Ghana
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>CIA World Factbook</source>
- <hdr>
- History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The history of the Gold Coast before the last quarter of the
- 15th century is derived primarily from oral tradition that
- refers to migrations from the ancient kingdoms of the western
- Soudan (the area of Mauritania and Mali). The Gold Coast was
- renamed Ghana upon independence in 1957 because of indications
- that present-day inhabitants descended from migrants who moved
- south from the ancient kingdom of Ghana.
- </p>
- <p> The first contact between Europe and the Gold Coast dates
- from 1470, when a party of Portuguese landed. In 1482, the
- Portuguese built Elmina Castle as a permanent trading base. The
- first recorded English trading voyage to the coast was made by
- Thomas Windham in 1553. During the next three centuries, the
- English, Danes, Dutch, Germans, and Portuguese controlled
- various parts of the coastal areas.
- </p>
- <p> In 1821, the British Government took control of the British
- trading forts on the Gold Coast. In 1844, Fanti chiefs in the
- area signed an agreement with the British that became the legal
- steppingstone to colonial status for the coastal area.
- </p>
- <p> From 1826 to 1900, the British fought a series of campaigns
- against the Ashantis, whose kingdom was located inland. In
- 1902, they succeeded in colonizing the Ashanti region and making
- the northern territories a protectorate. British Toga-land, the
- fourth territorial element eventually to form the nation, was
- part of a former German colony administered by the United
- Kingdom from Accra as a League of Nations mandate after 1922.
- In December 1946, British Togoland became a UN Trust Territory,
- and in 1957, following a 1956 plebiscite, the United Nations
- agreed that the territory would become part of Ghana when the
- Gold Coast achieved independence.
- </p>
- <p> The four territorial divisions were administered separately
- until 1946, when the British Government ruled them as a single
- unit. In 1951, a constitution was promulgated that called for
- a greatly enlarged legislature composed principally of members
- elected by popular vote directly or indirectly. An executive
- council was responsible for formulating policy, with most
- African members drawn from the legislature and including three
- ex officio members appointed by the governor.
- </p>
- <p> A new constitution, approved on April 29, 1954, established
- a cabinet comprising African ministers drawn from an
- all-African legislature chosen by direct election. In the
- elections that followed, the Convention People's Party (CPP),
- led by Kwame Nkrumah, won the majority of seats in the new
- legislative Assembly.
- </p>
- <p> In May 1956, Prime Minister Nkrumah's Gold Coast government
- issued a white paper containing proposals for Gold Coast
- independence. The British Government stated it would agree to
- a firm date for independence if a reasonable majority for such
- a step were obtained in the Gold Coast Legislative Assembly
- after a general election. This election, held in 1956, returned
- the CPP to power with 71 of the 104 seats in the Legislative
- Assembly. Ghana became an independent state on March 6, 1957,
- when the United Kingdom relinquished its control over the Colony
- of the Gold Coast and Ashanti, the Northern Territories
- Protectorate, and British Togoland.
- </p>
- <p> In subsequent reorganizations, the country was divided into
- 10 regions, which currently are subdivided into 110 districts.
- The original Gold Coast Colony now comprises the Western,
- Central, Eastern, and Greater Accra Regions, with a small
- portion at the mouth of the Volta River assigned to the Volta
- Region; the Ashanti area was divided into the Ashanti and
- Brong-Ahafo Regions; the Northern Territories into the Northern,
- Upper East, and Upper West Regions; and British Togoland
- essentially is the same area as the Volta Region.
- </p>
- <p>Post-lndependence Politics
- </p>
- <p> After independence, the CPP government under Nkrumah sought
- to develop Ghana as a modern, semi-industrialized, unitary
- socialist state. The government emphasized political and
- economic organization, endeavoring to increase stability and
- productivity through labor, youth, farmers, cooperatives, and
- other organizations integrated with the CPP. The government,
- according to Nkrumah, acted only as "the agent of the CPP" in
- seeking to accomplish these goals.
- </p>
- <p> The CPP's control was challenged and criticized, and Prime
- Minister Nkrumah used the Preventive Detention Act (1958),
- which provided for detention without trial for up to 5 years
- (later extended to 10 years). On July 1, 1960, a new
- constitution was adopted, changing Ghana from a parliamentary
- system with a prime minister to a republican form of government
- headed by a powerful president. In August 1960, Nkrumah was
- given authority to scrutinize newspapers and other publications
- before publication. This political evolution continued into
- early 1964, when a constitutional referendum changed the country
- to a one-party state.
- </p>
- <p> On February 24, 1966, the Ghanaian Army and police overthrew
- Nkrumah's regime. Nkrumah and all his ministers were dismissed,
- the CPP and National Assembly were dissolved, and the
- constitution was suspended. The new regime cited Nkrumah's
- flagrant abuse of individual rights and liberties, his regime's
- corrupt, oppressive, and dictatorial practices, and the rapidly
- deteriorating economy as the principal reasons for its action.
- </p>
- <p>Post-Nkrumah Politics
- </p>
- <p> The leaders of the February 24 coup established the new
- government around the National Liberation Council (NLC) and
- pledged an early return to a duly constituted civilian
- government. Members of the judiciary and civil service remained
- at their posts and committees of civil servants were
- established to handle the administration of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Ghana's government returned to civilian authority under the
- Second Republic in October 1969 after a parliamentary election
- in which the Progress Party, led by Kofi A. Busia, won 105 of
- the 140 seats. Until mid-1970, the powers of the chief of state
- were held by a presidential commission led by Brigadier A.A.
- Afrifa. In a special election on August 31, 1970, former Chief
- Justice Edward Akufo-Addo was chosen president, and Dr. Busia
- became prime minister.
- </p>
- <p> Faced with mounting economic problems, Prime Minister
- Busia's government undertook a drastic devaluation of the
- currency in December 1971. The government's inability to control
- the subsequent inflationary pressures stimulated further
- discontent, and military officers seized power in a bloodless
- coup on January 13, 1972.
- </p>
- <p> The coup leaders, led by Col. I.K. Acheampong, formed the
- National Redemption Council (NRC) to which they admitted other
- officers, the head of the police, and one civilian. The NRC
- promised improvements in the quality of life for all Ghanaians
- and based its programs on nationalism, economic development,
- and self-reliance. In 1975, a government reorganization resulted
- in the NRC's replacement by the Supreme Military Council (SMC),
- also headed by now-Gen. Acheampong.
- </p>
- <p> Unable to deliver on its promises, the NRC/SMC became
- increasingly marked by mismanagement and rampant corruption. In
- 1977, Gen. Acheampong brought forward the concept of union
- government (UNIGOV), which would make Ghana a nonparty state.
- Perceiving this as a ploy by Acheampong to retain power,
- professional groups and students launched strikes and
- demonstrations against the government in 1977 and 1978. The
- steady erosion in Acheampong's power led to his arrest in July
- 1978 by his chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Frederick Akuffo, who
- replaced him as head of state and leader of what became known
- as the SMC-2.
- </p>
- <p> Akuffo abandoned UNIGOV and established a plan to return to
- constitutional and democratic government. A Constitutional
- Assembly was established, and political party activity was
- revived. Akuffo was unable to solve Ghana's economic problems,
- however, or to reduce the rampant corruption in which senior
- military officers played a major role. On June 4, 1979, his
- government was deposed in a violent coup by a group of junior
- and noncommissioned officers--Armed Forces Revolutionary
- Council (AFRC)--with Flight Lt. Jerry John Rawlings as its
- chairman.
- </p>
- <p> The AFRC executed eight senior military officers, including
- former chiefs of state Acheampong and Akuffo; established
- Special Tribunals that, secretly and without due process, tried
- dozens of military officers, other government officials, and
- private individuals for corruption, sentencing them to long
- prison terms and confiscating their property; and, through a
- combination of force and exhortation, attempted to rid Ghanaian
- society of corruption and profiteering. At the same time, the
- AFRC accepted, with a few amendments, the draft constitution
- that had been submitted, permitted the scheduled presidential
- and parliamentary elections to take place in June and July,
- promulgated the constitution, and handed over to the newly
- elected president and parliament of the Third Republic on
- September 24, 1979.
- </p>
- <p> The 1979 constitution was modeled on those of Western
- democracies. It provided for the separation of powers among an
- elected president and a unicameral parliament, an independent
- judiciary headed by a Supreme Court, which protected individual
- rights, and other autonomous institutions, such as the
- Electoral Commissioner and the Ombudsman. The new president, Dr.
- Hilla Limann, was a career diplomat from the north and the
- candidate of the People's National Party (PDP), the political
- heir of Nkrumah's CPP. Of the 140 members of parliament, 71 were
- PNP.
- </p>
- <p> The PNP government established the constitutional
- institutions and generally respected democracy and individual
- human rights. It failed, however, to halt the continuing decline
- in the economy; corruption flourished, and the gap between rich
- and poor widened. On December 31, 1981, Flight Lt. Rawlings and
- a small group of enlisted and former soldiers launched a coup
- that succeeded against little opposition in toppling President
- Limann.
- </p>
- <p>Current Political Conditions
- </p>
- <p> Rawlings and his colleagues suspended the 1979 constitution,
- dismissed the president and his cabinet, dissolved the
- parliament, and proscribed existing political parties. They
- established the Provisional National Defense Council (PNDC),
- initially composed of seven members with Rawlings as chairman,
- to exercise executive and legislative powers. The existing
- judicial system was preserved, but alongside it the PNDC created
- the National Investigation Committee to root out corruption and
- other economic offenses, the anonymous Citizens' Vetting
- Committee to punish tax evasion, and the Public Tribunals to try
- various crimes. The PNDC proclaimed its intent to allow the
- people to exercise political power through defense committees
- to be established in communities, workplaces, and in units of
- the armed forces and police. Under the PNDC, Ghana remained a
- unitary government.
- </p>
- <p> In December 1982, the PNDC announced a plan to decentralize
- government from Accra to the regions, the districts, and local
- communities, but it maintained overall control by appointing
- regional and district secretaries who exercised executive
- powers and also chaired regional and district councils. Local
- councils, however, were expected progressively to take over the
- payment of salaries, with regions and districts assuming more
- powers from the national government. In 1984, the PNDC created
- a National Appeals Tribunal to hear appeals from the public
- tribunals, changed the Citizens' Vetting Committee into the
- Office of Revenue Collection and replaced the system of defense
- committees with Committees for the Defense of the Revolution.
- </p>
- <p> In 1984 ,the PNDC also created a National Commission on
- Democracy to study ways to establish participatory democracy in
- Ghana. The commission issued a "Blue Book" in July 1987
- outlining modalities for district-level elections, which were
- held in late 1988 and early 1989, for newly created district
- assemblies. One-third of the assembly members are appointed by
- the government. No provision has been made for regional or
- national elections. Ghana continues to be governed by PNDC
- directives and without a constitution.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
- February 1990.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-