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NDC PRESS CONFERENCE ON ITS 2008 MANIFESTO ADDRESSED BY THE CHAIRMAN OF ITS MANIFESTO DRAFTING COMMITTEE, HON. LEE OCRAN ON OCTOBER 10, 2008 AT THE PARTY HEADQAURTERS.
Ladies and Gentlemen of the Press, we have invited you here this afternoon to assist us to relay some of the positions taken by our party as well as those of some of our opponents on our 2008 Manifesto to the general public.
As of now, all the major political parties have launched their 2008 Manifesto. NDC was the last to out-door its manifesto; nevertheless, the NDC’s has generated a lot of excitement within the general populace and anxiety and fear in our opponents. This fear has forced some of them to make all sorts of comments ranging from plagiarism to branding it “sick” and “timid” yet the day before some of them had claimed our manifesto was a carbon copy of the NPP’s manifesto.
Mr. Chairman, if you do not know where you are going you cannot claim to be moving forward when you have not even taken a step. We know where we are going, indeed the NDC had always known where is going and how to get to the destination.
The NDC has the tradition of providing a manifesto for each electoral period. Others do not have. As you know, Article 38 (2) of the 1992 constitution directed that “the Government shall within two years after parliament first meets after coming into force of this constitution, draw up a programme for implementation within the following ten years, for the provision of free, compulsory and universal basic education”.
In line with the constitutional demand, we presented a programme for the provision of “Free, Compulsory and Universal Basic Education by the year 2005” under the title, ‘Basic Education – A Right’ and presented it to parliament in December 1994”.
Although the constitution does not define the “free” element of FCUBE, the NDC in its 2004 manifesto indicated that “free education” as in FCUBE will include free tuition, free textbooks and exercise books, free infrastructure such as school building, writing desks, chairs, free uniforms for specified categories of students and no fees for sports and culture”.
The NPP discreetly adopted our programme in 2005, but instead of implementing the scheme as we had defined it, rather decided to introduce a so-called “Capitation Grant” under which the government pays only ¢30,000 per pupil as its version of FCUBE. The capitation grant does not meet the requirements for free, compulsory and universal basic education as defined by the 1992 constitution. With most of their leading members having boycotted the writing of the constitution, they have failed to appreciate the full import of that constitutional directive.
Our 2008 manifesto builds on our position in the 2004 manifesto and continues to define what we mean by FCUBE. How could we have adopted the NPP’s narrow definition of free education as our policy?
In line with the constitutional provision that second cycle education shall be progressively free, we indicated in our 2004 Manifesto that:
- Tuition at the second cycle level will continue to be free;
- There will be a progressive introduction of a free textbooks scheme at the second cycle education level over time;
- The high boarding fees at the SSS level will be examined; and
- Government will take over responsibility for the payment of water and electricity costs at secondary second cycle boarding institutes.
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