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Komla Agbeli Gbedemah, from Anyako — an island-lagoon in Ghana’s Volta Region — was a revolutionary Pan-African youth activist and an iconic statesman. As a senior architect of both pre-colonial and postcolonial Ghana, he played a critical role in statecraft and shaped the political landscape of Ghana for decades. K. A. Gbedemah is widely recognised as the mastermind who propelled the image of Kwame Nkrumah — widely recognised as the leading spirit of Pan-Africanism — to national attention.

He understood the chess of the old guard, perhaps, much better than most of his contemporaries, and shrewdly manoeuvred his way through a muddled political arena. Mr Gbedemah always maintained a position of power on the chessboard until the very hour he kicked the bucket.

K. A. Gbedemah was born on 17 June 1913 at Warri, Nigeria where his father, Awumee Gbedemah, plied his trade as a government pharmacist. His mother was Emma Dey — and he was the eldest of six siblings. His early childhood experiences brought a unique exposure about life in British West Africa, since he had been domiciled in four typically colonial cosmopolitan cities, by the age of 10, namely: Warri, Keta, Cape Coast, and Accra.

Gbedemah’s formal education began at the Keta-based Local Roman Catholic School before he relocated to Accra, in 1923, to live with his maternal uncle, Carl Dey. His uncle was an educationist who served as a master at the Government Teacher’s Training College.

Gbedemah’s father, in 1925, had him enrolled at the SPG Grammar School, upon the recommendation of the principal, S. R. A. Nicholas — where he colleagues included Alfred Rhoule Otoo and Henry Prempeh. This was where he sat the Junior School Certificate Examination and was awarded the King Edward XII scholarship to attend the elite Prince of Wales College, currently known as the Achimota College.

Gbedemah, together with William Ofori-Atta and Edward Akufo-Addo (the latter was appointed as the first senior prefect), were part of the first batch of students to ever graduate from the Prince of Wales College.

Gbedemah, the youngest amongst the three students, obtained a Bachelor of Science degree upon completion of studies at the Prince of Wales College. He had his eyes set on a career as a medical practitioner but didn’t earn a scholarship to support his academic ambition. Nonetheless, as a well-connected pioneer old boy from the prestigious Prince of Wales College, the future was not at all dim.

He soon gained employment shortly after as the proof reader and, subsequently, editor for Times of West Africa. The newspaper was owned by the eminent Joseph Boakye Danquah, a man of letters. During this period, Gbedemah developed his craft as an all-rounded communicator during his apprenticeship under J. B. Danquah. At the Times of West Africa, the young Gbedemah became abreast with current affairs and popular culture. He simultaneously worked as one of the first teachers at Accra Academy.

 An unusually industrious young man, even by the standards of your quintessential workaholic, with a rare appetite for enterprise, Gbedemah soon set up a number of successful businesses and earned a decent living for himself before getting involved in Gold Coast politics. His former boss, J. B. Danquah, had served as Secretary of the Ghana Youth Conference from 1937–1947.

‘Afro Gbede’, as he would become known in mainstream post-independence politics, established timber and construction businesses which supplied material when edifices such as the Accra Airport, 37 Military Hospital and Accra Sports Stadium were under construction. He also worked with multinational corporations such as H. B. Green; a European building firm headquartered in the capital of the Gold Coast. His workforce comprised nearly forty souls, while his timber gangs operated across the storied settlements of Swedru, Odoben, and Asanteman, in the vicinity of Oda.

In 1941, aged 28, Gbedemah settled down and tied the knot with Adelaide Plange in a beautiful marriage ceremony. Seven years later, in August 1948, Gbedemah became a member of the United Gold Coast Convention (UGCC) — a conservative political organisation of which his former classmates, William Ofori-Atta and Edward Akufo-Addo, were members. He was appointed chairman of the Convention Youth Organisation (CYO), the youth wing of the UGCC, with Kojo Botsio serving as its secretary.

When Nkrumah arrived in the Gold Coast, on 16 December 1947, after a carefully considered offer made by J. B. Danquah, to become the general secretary of the UGCC, Gbedemah was the one who warmly received him on behalf of the organisation. Upon encountering each other, Gbedemah and Nkrumah were both awakened to the fact that the political direction of the Gold Coast had changed forever — and committed themselves, unconditionally, to building a modern democratic Republic. Nkrumah lived with Gbedemah, they slept on the same bed.

When Nkrumah was dismissed as General Secretary of the UGCC, Gbedemah was offered the position — but declined the offer.

Gbedemah and Nkrumah stood for universal adult suffrage and valued self-determination. They did not agree with the political position that the UGCC had taken. The UGCC preferred a system of democracy were a select-few aristocrats and a handful of the intelligentsia would be appointed to the Legislative Assembly, as the chosen political representatives of the Gold Coast, through some form of the elitist electoral college that excluded the general mass of the people.

Nkrumah and Gbedemah, together with Kojo Botsio, went on to form a triangular brotherhood that lasted for decades without decay until it was strained by unforeseen and regrettable circumstances.

At the pivotal assembly convened at Tarkwa in May of 1949 — called to determine whether Nkrumah ought to sever his ties with the United Gold Coast Convention — Gbedemah stood firmly among those CYO activists who pressed for Nkrumah's immediate resignation and championed the transformation of the CYO into a fully-fledged political party.

On 12 June 1949, when the mass-based Convention People’s Party was established after a breakaway from the UGCC, Gbedemah was appointed as its first vice-chairman. An exceptionally media-savvy and sage gentleman, he was the ideal candidate to run the propaganda machinery of the CPP. And this was done through the Accra Evening News; a daily newspaper founded by Osagyefo Dr Kwame Nkrumah in 1948 to mobilise the masses for the herculean challenge of political autonomy.

Afro Gbede’s fiery posts in print press landed him in jail at the James Fort Prison from 17 October 1949 to 2 March 1950, for “publishing false news likely to cause harm”. A naturally gifted propagandist with a flair for politics, he introduced the Prisons Graduate Cap (P. G. Cap) so that politically active citizens who had been imprisoned for positive action would be celebrated with this fashion statement. A symbol of defiance, the P. G. Cap represented honour and prestige within the ranks of the party.

Kwame Nkrumah, who also ended up in jail, sent a number of communiques to Gbedemah which were handwritten on toilet paper and smuggled out of the Ussher Fort prison. Nkrumah had a secret agenda to contest the Accra Central electoral district seat, and placed full trust in Gbedemah to manifest his political ambitions.

In a strategic move to protect Nkrumah’s seat, and as a diversionary tactic, so that the colonial administration would not anticipate Nkrumah’s next move, or worse of, disqualify Nkrumah from the election, Afro Gbede decided to front himself as the prospective candidate for the seat. He only substituted his name for Nkrumah’s at the eleventh hour. And consequently, Nkrumah’s intention to contest the seat in the 1951 Legislative Assembly took everyone by surprise. The plot was successful and Nkrumah won the election. Gbedemah had, instead, opted for a seat at the Keta constituency and was elected to the Legislative Assembly too.

On 8 February 1951, K. A. Gbedemah was appointed by Nkrumah, who by then became the first African Prime Minister, as Minister for Health and Labour. Afro Gbede also served in two different cabinet portfolios from 1952-1954.

He also set up the Sir John Maude’s Commission, in 1952, to lay the foundations for an improved and progressive healthcare sector. In 1954, at the age of 41, K. A. Gbedemah shattered the age-old status quo and became the first African in post-colonial Africa to hold the position of finance minister.

In his first budget speech, in July 1954, Afro Gbede paid tribute to his predecessor, Kenneth Tours, and signed the contract that introduced Ghana’s first currency — the Ghana Pound Sterling. He initiated a broad range of economic reforms to create an atmosphere where indigenous businesses could thrive. Gbedemah further pushed for the representation of Africans in the International Monetary Fund, which eventually led to the formation of an African Department, administered by Africans. And from 1952 – 1961, he made 23 trips to Europe and America to negotiate the Volta River Project.

Gbedemah, together with Kojo Botsio, flew to London in 1957 to deliberate with the British Foreign Minister, Lennox Boyd, about full self-governance for Ghana.

Gbedemah soon fell out with Nkrumah and was asked to leave the latter’s cabinet in 1961. Gbedemah's decidedly conservative disposition and his broadly right-wing political outlook stood in marked and irreconcilable tension with Nkrumah's more radical persuasions — a fundamental divergence that would, in due course, precipitate a profound rupture between the two men. The denouement was as stark as it was consequential: Gbedemah found himself compelled to withdraw into exile. He returned to Ghana on June 16 1966, 114 days after the overthrow of Nkrumah. Upon his return to his native soil, he harboured ambitions of joining forces with his exiled compatriot Busia to establish a party with which to contest the elections of 1969 — a prospect that, regrettably, came to naught. He later instituted the National Alliance of Liberals in 1969 which contested elections, winning 29 out of the 140 seats in Parliament.

The Progress Party (PP), led by K. A. Busia, won 105 seats. K.A. Gbedemah won a seat, on the ticket of the National Alliance for Liberals, to represent the Keta Constituency once more. However, the Progress Party, using the controversial Article 71 of the 1969 constitution — which disqualified persons against whom adverse findings were made, by the Commission of Enquiry, from holding public office — prevented Gbedemah’s return to Parliament. He, therefore, could not take up his official post as the Leader of Opposition.

In Gbedemah's absence from Parliament, Prime Minister Busia reigned, without serious contest, as the sole commanding political figure within the chamber — a circumstance which, as a number of astute political observers had noted, considerably eased the burden upon the Progress Party. It was precisely this unchallenged dominance that emboldened the government to enact certain legislation and pursue courses of action which, paradoxically, hastened its own undoing.

In 1972, when the PP Government of Prime Minister Busia was overthrown, Gbedemah was appointed as Ambassador Plenipotentiary, a position he held from April to June 1972. But as a staunch democrat, he disagreed with the style of governance that the National Redemption Council (NRC), and later Supreme Military Council (SMC), had adopted. It wasn’t long before Gbedemah led a resilient demand for a return to civilian rule from military dictatorship.

Gbedemah formed the Popular Movement for Freedom and Justice (PMFJ) with William Ofori-Atta, Lt. Gen A. A. Afrifa, Victor Owusu, Professor A. A. Boahen, K.S.P. Jantuah and others. Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and Sam Okudzeto served as secretaries for the PMFJ. Gbedemah was arrested in 1978, and was only released after the palace coup organized Lieutenant General Akuffo on July 4 that year.

When the prohibition on political activity was lifted in 1978, his aspirations of returning to public life were summarily thwarted by disqualification clauses pertaining to the alleged embezzlement of state funds during his tenure as Minister. In what has since been regarded as perhaps the most lamentable political alliance of his career, he took the remarkable step of publishing a full-page declaration in the national press, imploring his fellow Ghanaians to cast their votes for Victor Owusu of the Popular Front Party in the presidential contest. It was, however, the People's National Party, under the stewardship of Dr Hilla Limann, that ultimately prevailed in the general elections of 1979.

At 84, in 1979, Gbedemah married Barbara Vardon who was 18 years old. He had six children from his marriages.

K. A. Gbedemah — a Pan-African mastermind — perished on Saturday, July 11, 1998, at the ripe age of 85.

The author, V. L. K. Djokoto (b. 1995), is a financier and gallerist. He leads D. K. T. Djokoto & Co — an old-fashioned top-tier multi-family office, established in 1950 — which is deeply anchored on residential real estate; steers the wheels of rural banking across coastal Ghana; revived the Accra Evening News, established in 1948, delicately rebranded into a post-partisan cultural newspaper; and finances a cultic arts and culture department intensely focused on engineering a radiant legacy. Through expertly crafted artistic experiences, Djokoto seeks to mobilise Ghanaians weaving African music, literature and art.

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.