Getting High On Lies And Insults

It has gotten to the point that NDC presidential candidate, John Evans Atta Mills, has to come on radio from his temporary base in South Africa to say �I�m not speaking from a cemetery. I�m talking to you from my hotel room. I�m well and fit. Atta Mills is not dead!� From discussions at bars afterwards, not even his own voice could kill the suspicion created by the mendacious mind which pulled that practical joke on the NDC. That is how ridiculously scurrilous this year�s political campaign has gotten. A baseless, mean, reckless but probably orchestrated story is posted on the web (ghanaweb) that the NDC flag-bearer is dead. A couple of radio stations pick it up and without cross-checking put it out there. They attribute it to the website and believe, as usual, that alone exonerates them from claim or blame! This has been the metastasis route in Ghana which guarantees that every lie designed to butcher the character of our leaders spreads and spreads like a cancer with the hope that it malignantly destroys the entire career of those who have chosen to pursue national service at the very top. This �Mills is Dead� story ended one week of speculative noises about the health of Prof Mills. The NDC�s way of dealing with speculations about their leader was to apply what they saw to be tit-for-tat. They upped their jejune, libellous attacks on the NPP presidential candidate Akufo-Addo. Since his nomination as his party�s presidential candidate, Nana Akufo-Addo�s popularity has soared; he appears to be clearly running away with the polls from the other presidential candidates. The NDC can�t find an antidote for this so they have attributed Akufo-Addo�s ratings to performance-enhancing drugs. They are even calling for a drug test! As if this year�s presidential election is one of the disciplines at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games. What the NDC, hopefully, should learn from the Mills is Dead fabrication is that the cheapest commodity in political PR is lies. It requires no research. Just make it sensational. Everybody can do, so don�t ever fool yourself that you hold a monopoly on it. Indeed, if The Statesman had not apologised, retracted and continued with their 2006 story that Prof Mills was afflicted by throat cancer, an extension of that would have been that cancer of the larynx is often caused by excessive alcohol or smoking. Naso laryngeal cancer also affects the nose like sinus. Work that out for yourself. Telling lies is cheap and can be as effective as you have friends in the media. The NPP has plenty. So let not the NDC kid themselves. Fortunately for them, the NPP candidate wants a campaign based on issues. And so it shall be but let no one mistake responsibility for meekness. Their hackneyed, over-used, over-aged, sustained accusation that Akufo-Addo enjoyed a joint or two was clearly not working. The only thing that continued to be high was the NPP man�s ratings. They�d expected Akufo-Addo or his team to respond but none was coming. This frustrated the NDC but they kept lighting the joint issue, holding it till it burnt their own fingers. Events elsewhere might have finally convinced them all that propaganda goes up in smoke as far as voters are concerned. About half of the Tory (Conservative Party) leadership, including leader David Cameron, had either admitted inhaling ganja or being exposed to it. This did not affect their poll ratings negatively. Do British voters no longer take cannabis smoking as a recreational drug seriously? Or do they simply balance what they know about a politician to what the papers say that the politician might have done in his youthful past or at his pastime? So the NDC papers, determined to win this election by burying the NPP under mud, moved from soft drugs to hard drugs, notwithstanding the fact that attempts to link Akufo-Addo three years ago to Eric Amoateng�s heroine predicament had completely backfired, with the whole scandal being exposed as an orchestrated conspiracy of convenience made possible by the internet between NDC newspapers and a Don Quixote web-surfing character in the UK, who saw himself as the arrested MP�s lawyer and for a while made Ghanaians believe that he was both a lawyer and medical doctor. Around the same time, on February 8, 2005, in Baltimore, Maryland, rumours about Mayor Martin O�Malley came to an end. A report in the Washington Post revealed that allegations of the Democratic mayor cheating on his wife and fathering a lovechild were false. Worse still, it came to light that a senior aide to Republican governor Robert L Ehrlich Jr planted the stories on a conservative website. O�Malley had at the time mounted a serious challenge against Ehrlich for the 2006 gubernatorial elections. He won enough sympathy to upset Ehrlich�s incumbency. Research upon research has shown that unlike many campaign related activities, scandals sometimes have the potential to bring about the defeat of entrenched incumbents. But it would be dubious for the NDC to think that inventing scandals about Nana Akufo-Addo would help their candidate � the entrenched three-term flag-bearing incumbent Mills. The Palaver story put out a story that as Foreign Minister Nana Akufo-Addo was arrested at a New York Airport carrying cocaine, but was only spared because America, where users are jailed for carrying a gram, showed leniency when the smuggler, carrying a diplomatic passport, convinced them that the stash was for personal use. No date of the incident was given. The amount found was also not given. The paper�s Features Editor, who also happens to be the Deputy Spokesman to Prof Mills, told radio listeners that the arrest took place somewhere in 2004 when Nana was attending a UN general assembly meeting. He said his paper had �more evidence.� It was a brave lie by any standard. But then again this is a country where a journalist can say he�d interviewed an imaginary mother of an imaginary teenager who had died after an attempt to illegally abort Akufo-Addo�s baby. And, yes, that �journalist� is still allowed �oxygen� to broadcast. There is something extremely irresponsible about what the NDC is doing. To falsely accuse Akufo-Addo of being a drug addict � a wee smoker, cocaine addict � is to send a very dangerous message to this country�s youth who see him as an excellent role model. The message from the NDC to the youth is that �if you want to rise to the top take cocaine like Akufo-Addo.� Akufo-Addo is a man who has excelled in every field of endeavour. His children will tell you, �He�s the best dad!� In law, he reached the pinnacle of his profession, being counted among the best of the elite profession. In politics, he has worked hard over the last 30 years and gotten to the top on merit. In business he has excelled. He has earned a remarkable international reputation as diplomat par excellence. He�s a great sport. He�s loved by all. To say this man is on drugs is to campaign for drugs. The majority of Ghanaians below the age of 50 have been exposed to wee use, one way or the other. Even if Nana Akufo-Addo, who grew up in the flower, liberal age of the funky sixties in both England and Ghana, had experimented with grass, like many students do, what in modern PR tactics informed the NDC that they could win by tagging the man, who carries the tag �yenim wo firi titi�, as a dangerous, hopeless, reckless drug abuser? Finally they got a response, with Akufo-Addo�s lawyers denying he uses any illicit drug. Last year, reports of British home secretary (interior minister), Jacqui Smith admitting using soft drugs (cannabis) as a student was as newsworthy as a dog biting a man, or a Ghanaian husband being unfaithful. She knew she was on safe grounds. Her predecessor, Charles Clarke�s admission in 1997, the year he became an MP, that he had taken drugs �a couple of times in my late teens� did not stop Tony Blair from appointing him home secretary. Smith�s followed a series of revelations and admissions on the youthful highness of British politicians. Not odd for any Ghanaian who�d been a student in the West and the controlled recreational �usefulness� of marijuana to many of those who later on turn out to be respectable leaders. Even two Labour ministers responsible for the UK�s drug policy have admitted to taking drugs in the past. In 2003 Caroline Flint admitted she took cannabis as a student but did not like it. Her successor was more interested in it. On becoming the minister for drugs policy, Vernon Coaker admitted having �one or two puffs of marijuana� while a student. Over 30 UK MPs have come clean. Qanawu was in the UK when in 2000, then shadow home secretary Ann Widdecombe came up with what that shapeless fat bag thought was a fantastic idea of �100 fine for people caught with even the smallest amount of cannabis. This got her own frontbenchers so unhappy that eight of them, including Conservatives chairman Francis Maude, shadow industry secretary David Willets and shadow environment secretary Oliver Letwin, owned up to a drug history. Tim Yeo, then agriculture spokesman but now a backbencher, told the Times: �I was offered it on occasion and enjoyed it. I think it can have a much pleasanter experience than having too much to drink.� Editor�s Note: This article was first published in February 2008.