Jump to content

Jerry Rawlings: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Bampti (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Bampti (talk | contribs)
Line 55: Line 55:
In March, 1968, he was posted to [[Takoradi]] in the [[Western Region (Ghana)|Western Region]] to continue his studies. He graduated in January 1969, and was commissioned a [[Pilot Officer]], winning the coveted "Speed Bird Trophy" as the best cadet in flying and airmanship. He earned the rank of [[Flight Lieutenant]] in April 1978.
In March, 1968, he was posted to [[Takoradi]] in the [[Western Region (Ghana)|Western Region]] to continue his studies. He graduated in January 1969, and was commissioned a [[Pilot Officer]], winning the coveted "Speed Bird Trophy" as the best cadet in flying and airmanship. He earned the rank of [[Flight Lieutenant]] in April 1978.


During his service with the Ghanaian Air Force, Rawlings perceived a deterioration of discipline and morale, reflecting the corruption of the [[Supreme Military Council, Ghana|Supreme Military Council]] (SMC) at that time. As promotion brought him into contact with the privileged classes and their social values, his view of the injustices in society hardened. He was thus regarded with some unease by the SMC. He read widely and discussed social and political ideas with a growing circle of like-minded friends and colleagues.
During his service with the Ghanaian Air Force, Rawlings perceived a deterioration of discipline and morale, reflecting the corruption of the [[Supreme Military Council, Ghana|Supreme Military Council]] (SMC) at that time. He read widely and discussed social and political ideas with a growing circle of like-minded friends and colleagues.


On May 28, 1979, Rawlings, together with six others who were arrested earlier, appeared before a General [[Court Martial]] in Accra, charged with leading a [[mutiny]] of junior officers and enlisted men of the Ghanaian Armed Forces on May 15, 1979. There was strong public reaction, especially after his statement had been read in court, explaining the social injustices that had prompted him to act{{Fact|date=March 2007}}. The ranks of the Armed Forces, in particular, expressed deep sympathy with his stated aims.
On May 28, 1979, Rawlings, together with six others who were arrested earlier, appeared before a General [[Court Martial]] in Accra, charged with leading a [[mutiny]] of junior officers and enlisted men of the Ghanaian Armed Forces on May 15, 1979. There was strong public reaction, especially after his statement had been read in court, explaining the social injustices that had prompted him to act{{Fact|date=March 2007}}. The ranks of the Armed Forces, in particular, expressed deep sympathy with his stated aims.

Revision as of 21:02, 6 June 2009

Jerry John Rawlings
Former President Jerry Rawlings in May 2009
1st President of Ghana
(4th Republic)
In office
7 January 1993 – 7 January 2001
Vice PresidentKow Nkensen Arkaah (1993-1997)
John Atta Mills (1997-2001)
Succeeded byJohn Agyekum Kufuor
10th Head of state of Ghana
In office
31 December 1981 – 7 January 1993
Vice PresidentNone
Preceded byDr. Hilla Limann
Succeeded byJohn Agyekum Kufuor
8th Head of state of Ghana
In office
4 June 1979 – 24 September 1979
Preceded byGeneral Fred Akuffo
Succeeded byDr. Hilla Limann
Personal details
Bornright
(1947-06-22) 22 June 1947 (age 77)
Gold Coast (British colony) Accra, Gold Coast)
Diedright
thumb
Resting placeright
thumb
Political partymilitary - AFRC (1979)
military - PNDC(1981-1993)
National Democratic Congress
1992-present
SpousesNana Konadu Agyeman-Rawlings
Parent
  • right
  • thumb
ProfessionFighter Pilot

Jerry John Rawlings (born Jeremiah Rawlings John 22 June 1947 in Accra, Gold Coast) is a Ghanaian former air force officer and politician. He was twice the head of state of Ghana and was the 1st President of the Fourth Republic. He first appeared on the Ghanaian political scene on 15 May, 1979 when he led a group of junior officers in the Ghana Air Force in a mutiny that resulted in his arrest and imprisonment. He was court-martialled in public and sentenced to death. Due to his display of patriotism in his defense speeches, he was widely seen across the country as a true son of Ghana, and was nicknamed Junior Jesus for his initials "JJ". Before he could be executed, another group of junior officers within the Ghana Army sprung Rawlings out and demanded that he lead the june 4 uprising that had engulfed the nation. it is important to note that Major Boakye-Djan did not lead the young officers and ranks who broke JJ out of jail. the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC) was formed after an armed clash between government forces and those armed forces on the side of the uprising. lives were lost sadly on both sides. before before 15th may, Ghana was already far into the process of returning to civilian rule and general elections were already scheduled, however the relationship between the corrupt military government and the civilian politicians was too close. after the AFRC took over and conducted what they termed 'a housecleaning exersicee', retrieved large sums of stolen government money into government coffers, stabilised inflation, the AFRC went ahead to conduct an election and handed over power to Dr. Hilla Limann who won the popular vote in the second round of the general election in the election to establish the Third Republic. Less than two years later, Dr. Limann's civilian and constitutional government was overthrown again by Jerry Rawlings on 31 December, 1981 because the institutionalised corruption that the june 4 uprising stood up against had began again. He then installed the Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC) government which was a government of participatory democracy. in effect, Rawlings demystified governance in Ghana, preaching to people that they have a right to demand accountability from their leaders who are there to serve the people.

In the early 1990s internal pressures led by a group identified with the Danquah-Busia tradition coupled with external pressures from Ghana's development partners forced the PNDC government to adopt constitutional rule. Rawlings on many platforms professed his hatred for multiparty democracy because of the past destructive years that multiparty systems had brought to Ghana (i.e the Busia days). nevertheless, a National Commission on Democracy was established by the PNDC to begin the road to multiparty democracy. he retired from the Armed Forces, set up the National Democratic Congress. this party, with Rawlings as its candidate, won 58.3 % votes (still the highest percentage votes won by a presidential candidate in Ghana) in the 1992 elections which the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) claimed was a stolen verdict although international observers judged the elections largely free and fair. Rawlings won the 1996 election as well.

After two terms in office, barred by the constitution from standing in any election, he endorse his vice-president John Atta Mills as presidential candidate in 2000. the NDC with Mills as candidate however lost the elections to the NPP Kufour, but by a very narrow margin.

Rawlings is married to Nana Konadu Agyeman-Rawlings and has four children: three girls and a boy. He is the joint recipient of the 1993 World Hunger Award.

Background

Rawlings was born to the Scottish pharmacist James Ramsay John and his Ghanaian Ewe mistress, Victoria Agbotui. His father had migrated to the then Gold Coast in 1935 with his wife Mary to work for the United Africa Company (UAC). In 1941 he started an affair with Madam Agbotui, then a caterer at the State House in Ghana. The relationship ended in 1947, the same year that Rawlings was born. James John refused to acknowledge Rawlings as his son, however before his death he left a message of apology- to his- with his scottish family.

In order not to let her son lose his Scottish heritage, his mother named him after his father as Jeremiah Rawlings John. This name was later changed to Jerry John Rawlings following a clerical error when the young Rawlings signed up at the Royal Air Force. His mother hoped for a career as a medical doctor for her son and enrolled him at the prestigious Achimota School. he completed his O level education in 1966.

He consequently enlisted as a Flight Cadet in the Ghana Air Force in August 1967, and was subsequently selected for officer cadet training at the Ghana Military Academy and Training School, Teshie, in Accra. For his advanced flight lessons he was sent to the RAF for training in the early 70s.

Military career

In March, 1968, he was posted to Takoradi in the Western Region to continue his studies. He graduated in January 1969, and was commissioned a Pilot Officer, winning the coveted "Speed Bird Trophy" as the best cadet in flying and airmanship. He earned the rank of Flight Lieutenant in April 1978.

During his service with the Ghanaian Air Force, Rawlings perceived a deterioration of discipline and morale, reflecting the corruption of the Supreme Military Council (SMC) at that time. He read widely and discussed social and political ideas with a growing circle of like-minded friends and colleagues.

On May 28, 1979, Rawlings, together with six others who were arrested earlier, appeared before a General Court Martial in Accra, charged with leading a mutiny of junior officers and enlisted men of the Ghanaian Armed Forces on May 15, 1979. There was strong public reaction, especially after his statement had been read in court, explaining the social injustices that had prompted him to act[citation needed]. The ranks of the Armed Forces, in particular, expressed deep sympathy with his stated aims.

Military coup

When he was scheduled for another court appearance on 4 June 1979, Rawlings was sprung from custody.[1] With the support of both the military and civilians, he led a bloody coup that ousted the Supreme Military Council from office and brought the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC) to power.

As one of his first acts in power, Rawlings signed the orders for the execution of some former military dictators who were later executed. Ignatius Kutu Acheamphong, Akwasi Afrifa, and Fred Akuffo were executed. Five other generals—Joy Amedume, Yaw Boakye, Roger Felli, Kotei, and Utuka—were also put to death. Rawlings is also rumoured to have been involved in the killings of Supreme Court Justices Kwadjo Agyei Agyepong, Frederick Sarkodie, and Cecilia Koranteng Addo, as well as a military officers, Major Sam Acquah, and Major Dasana Nantogmah. However, a national Truth and Reconciliation Commission[disambiguation needed], chaired by Supreme Court Justice G.E.K. Aikins, absolved Rawlings of any involvement.

The AFRC, under the chairmanship of Rawlings, carried out a much wider "house-cleaning exercise" aimed at purging the armed forces and society at large of corruption and graft as well as restoring a sense of moral responsibility and accountability in public life. Meanwhile, following a programme already set in motion before the June 4 uprising, the ruling junta organized free general elections. On 24 September 1979, the AFRC handed over power to a civilian government led by the People's National Party (PNP), under President Hilla Limann.

Limann's administration was cut short on 31 December 1981, when Rawlings deposed him in another coup. A Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC), composed of both civilian and military members, was established with Rawlings as Chairman. In his second tenure in power, Rawlings's policies became more centrist, and he began to advocate free-market reforms. However, despite the country's economic success, the Ghanaian government was criticized both at home and abroad for committing numerous abuses of human rights.

Democratic President

Citizens began demanding a more democratic form of government as the 1990s progressed. Rawlings answered this demand by forming a National Commission for Democracy (NCD), empowered to hold regional debates and formulate some suggestions for a transition to multi-party democracy. Although opposition groups complained that the NCD was too closely associated with the PNDC, the commission continued its work through 1991. In March of that year the NCD released a report recommending the election of an executive president, the establishment of a national assembly, and the creation of a prime minister post. The PNDC accepted the report, and the following year it was approved in a national referendum. Political parties were legalised—with the provision that none could use names that had been used before—and a timetable was set for presidential and parliamentary elections.

Rawlings retired from the Ghanaian Armed Forces on September 14, 1992.

When presidential elections were held in 1992, Rawlings stood as the candidate for the National Democratic Congress (NDC), the successor party to the PNDC. Although his opponents were given access to television and newspaper coverage—and limits to the freedom of the press had been lifted—no single candidate could match the popularity of the sitting head of state. Election returns on November 3, 1992, revealed that Rawlings had won 58.3 percent of the vote, for a landslide victory. Foreign observers declared the voting to be "free and fair."[citation needed]

Almost immediately, the leaders of the country's opposition parties claimed that the presidential election was not fair, and that widespread abuses had occurred. The leaders encouraged their followers to boycott subsequent parliamentary elections, with the result being that NDC candidates won 189 of 200 seats in the new parliament. Rawlings was therefore accorded a four-year term backed by an elected assembly of supporters for his platform. Answering questions of polling place irregularities, he promised to initiate a new voter registration program to be completed in time for elections in four years.

In 1993, President Rawlings headed the Ghana delegation which participated in the first Tokyo International Conference on African Development.[2]

Rawlings and the NDC were elected in 1992 and 1996. These victories were decried as fraud-laden by Rawlings's opponents, in the book Stolen Verdict published by the opposition, which chronicles instances of vote rigging and acts of intimidation and fear. Per constitutional mandate, Rawlings's term of office ended in 2001; he retired in 2001 and was succeeded by John Kufuor, his main opponent in the 1996 elections. Kufuor succeeded in defeating Rawlings's vice-president John Atta-Mills in the 2000 vote, and did so again in 2004.

Although Rawlings did not complete any tertiary education (he completed Achimota Secondary School) and had only an Air Force graduate diploma, he appointed several technocrats such as Dr. Kwesi Botchwey, Ekwow Spio-Garbrah and Dr. Obed Yao Asamoah to important government positions.

Post-Presidency Activities

Rawlings later played a key role as a check on the NPP government during his time as then erstwhile president

References

  1. ^ "Rawlings: The legacy". BBC. 1 December, 2000. Retrieved 2007-03-29. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ Japan, Ministry for Foreign Affairs (MOFA): 28 African nations

See also

Political offices
Preceded by Head of state of Ghana
1979
Succeeded by
Preceded by Head of state of Ghana
1981–1993
Succeeded by
Constitutional Rule
Preceded by
Constitutional rule re-established in Ghana
President of Ghana
1993 – 2001
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chairman of the Economic Community of West African States
1994 – 1996
Succeeded by
Party political offices
New title National Democratic Congress presidential candidate
1992, 1996
Succeeded by


Template:Persondata

ak:Jerry John Rawlings