Audio By Carbonatix
A lecturer at the Institute of African Studies at the University of Ghana, Dr. Edward Nangbine says Ghana is living dangerously if ethnocentrism is not eliminated from the country's political structure.
The Coordinator for Language, Literature and Drama at the nation's premier university referred to the development as "a cancer" that should be weeded out of Ghanaian politics.
"...[it] is just the cancer in the nation right now and we need to excise that cancer. It might be painful ...but we need to do it; we need to start looking at political parties as not belonging to ethnic groups".
He made the comments on the Super Morning Show on Joy FM, Monday, in response to an earlier comment expressed by policy analyst, Dr. Charles Wereko-Brobby who was a co-panelist on the programme. The panel was discussing ethnocentrism, culture and patriotism in the second week of promoting patriotism in the month of March dubbed: 'Patriotism Month'.
Dr. Wereko-Brobby, Chief Policy Analyst at the Ghana Institute of Public Policy Option (GIPPO) had expressed worry over the "grey interference and sabotage of the political process by the introduction of the ethnic factor".
"I think that is our biggest worry. That is the biggest thing that we must focus on. Where we are tagging political parties by so-called ethnic composition of those parties; those are the things I think we should worry about," Dr. Wereko-Brobby stressed.
In his submission, Dr. Nangbine said any effort to develop the country could be hampered if people continue to see their ethnicity as more important to them than being Ghanaian.
"People think of ethnicity a lot; it comes up so much...if people in position would think first of putting somebody from their ethnic group in a position rather than look at whether the person has capacity to perform in the particular position, then we are not going to go forward.
"Ethnicity has worked itself into our political structures. So we should begin to look at political parties as political parties and not as ethnic parties...because, from the political structure, it will seep into the civil structure and then we can't go forward," he stressed.
Latest Stories
-
Myth or Reality? A Musical Epic of the Economic Magic of Burkina Faso
14 seconds -
December in Ghana is alive – Creatives say the issue is amplification, not activity
17 minutes -
Jubilee Park comes alive as thousands gather for Sonnie Badu’s ‘Rhythms of Africa’ concert
28 minutes -
NDC not considering third-term bid for Mahama – Suhuyini
30 minutes -
4-year presidential term has limited Ghana’s development – Alhassan Suhuyini backs 5-year proposal
36 minutes -
Mahama’ rising popularity is giving NPP sleepless nights – Suhuyini
40 minutes -
STC, Metro Mass buses to feature smart monitoring and cashless systems in 2026 – Transport Minister
46 minutes -
Suhuyini: Electioneering period reforms possible, but campaigning can’t be legislated
53 minutes -
Lack of regulation fuelled motorcycle accidents – Transport Minister
1 hour -
NSA scandal: AG hints at plans to file civil suit against suspectsÂ
1 hour -
Trade and industry set for stronger growth in 2026 – Ofosu-Adjare
1 hour -
UG commissions innovation enclave to drive youth entrepreneurship
1 hour -
Black Sheep Foundation honours 255 teachers in maiden Christmas initiative
1 hour -
Screams for help and panic as tourists rescued from fatal Laos ferry disaster
1 hour -
University renaming aimed at national unity, not politics – Nortsu-Kotoe
2 hours
