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Republic of Ghana

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Revision as of 12:11, 15 March 2023 by Verda.Majo (talk | contribs) (→‎1966 coup d'etat: added brief quotation about the coup)
Republic of Ghana
Gaana Adehyeman
Capital
and largest city
Accra
Official languagesEnglish
Area
• Total
238,535 km²
Population
• 2022 estimate
32,103,042

Ghana, officially the Republic of Ghana, is a country in West Africa. Its capital city is Accra.

History

Early history

Archaeological evidence indicates that present-day Ghana has been inhabited for many thousand years. The early Kingdom of Ghana (sometimes known as "Ghanata" or "Wagadugu") was one of the most powerful African empires for several hundred years.[1]

European arrivals

In 1471, the Portuguese arrived on the coast of Guinea. Over time, more Europeans arrived in Ghana, attracted by gold, ivory and timber. Eventually, enslaved Africans for plantations in the Americas become the focus of trade, and European powers such as England, the Netherlands, Portugal, Germany, France, Sweden and Denmark all competed in the slave trade for over 300 years. The Europeans traded weapons and manufactured goods for enslaved Africans, who were transported for across the Atlantic Ocean to work on plantations, giving rise to the Atlantic slave trade.[1]

British colony

From 1821 until its independence in 1957, Ghana fell under British rule and was known as the Gold Coast. The Gold Coast was officially proclaimed a British crown colony in 1874. By this time, slavery had become illegal under British law, and so business in colonial Ghana focused more on exploiting cocoa, gold, timber and palm oil.

In the late 1940s, Marxist Pan-Africanist Kwame Nkrumah became the Secretary General of the first political party of the Gold Coast, the United Gold Coast Convention (UGCC). In 1948, riots breaks out in Accra when police fired at an anti-colonial demonstration, with 29 killed and hundreds wounded.

Eventually, Nkrumah formed the Convention People's Party (CPP), which achieved rapid success and quickly became a major player on the nationalist political scene. In 1950, Nkrumah called for a national strike and was jailed for his demands for independence. However, Nkrumah was released from jail after the CPP won the first election for the Legislative Assembly.

Nkrumah became Prime Minister in 1952, was re-elected in 1954 and 1956, and retained the position when Ghana declared independence from Britain in 1957.[1]

Independence

Ghana became independent from the United Kingdom in 1957, under Kwame Nkrumah's administration. Nkrumah's administration was socialist and Pan-Africanist in its leanings. A 1966 U.S. government internal memorandum describes Nkrumah as "strongly pro-Communist" and says that "Nkrumah was doing more to undermine our interests than any other black African."[2]

Nkrumah provided funding and training to members of the African National Congress in South Africa who wanted to overthrow apartheid.

Economically, independent Ghana was developed through Five Year Plans, including the First and Second Five Year Development Plans (1951-1956 and 1959-1964), as well as an uncompleted Seven Year Development Plan beginning in 1964, which was halted after an imperialist-backed reactionary coup regime took power in 1966. The Seven Year Development plan as well as the coup are described in detail in Nkrumah's 1968 book, Dark Days in Ghana.

1966 coup d'etat

The CIA organized a coup against Nkrumah on 24 February 1966. At least 1,600 people died in the coup, which was also supported by Canada and the United Kingdom. The National Liberation Council (NLC) that took power after the coup privatized state-owned businesses. The IMF convinced the military junta to end Ghana’s industrialization program.[3]

In Challenge of the Congo, Nkrumah summarized his view of the reason for the coup: "Ghana, in the forefront of the struggle for a free and united Africa and on the brink of a great industrial breakthrough which would have given true economic independence, had become too dangerous an example to the rest of Africa to be allowed to continue under a socialist-directed government."[4]


In his 1978 book In Search of Enemies, former CIA case officer John Stockwell wrote that the CIA, through omissions in their recordkeeping and distancing themselves from actions while setting the stage for them to occur, were able to maintain plausible deniability in many covert actions. He writes that this is how the coup in Ghana was handled, writing that the CIA station in Ghana played a "major role" in the overthrow of Nkrumah's government in 1966, writing:

The Accra station was nevertheless encouraged by headquarters to maintain contact with dissidents of the Ghanian army for the purpose of gathering intelligence on their activities. It was given a generous budget, and maintained intimate contact with the plotters as a coup was hatched. So close was the station's involvement that it was able to coordinate the recovery of some classified Soviet military equipment by the United States as the coup took place. The station even proposed to headquarters through back channels that a squad be on hand at the moment of the coup to storm the Chinese embassy, kill everyone inside, steal their secret records, and blow up the building to cover the fact. This proposal was quashed, but inside CIA headquarters the Accra station was given full, if unofficial credit for the eventual coup, in which eight Soviet advisors were killed. None of this was adequately reflected in the agency's written records.[5]

1965 U.S. security council memorandums from several months before the coup, not released until years later, show U.S officials discussing among themselves that pro-Western coup plotters in Ghana were keeping U.S. officials "briefed", and a U.S. security council staffer states that "we and other Western countries (including France) have been helping to set up the situation by ignoring Nkrumah's pleas for economic aid" hoping that this would "spark" the coup.[6] Weeks after the coup, March 12 1966 U.S. internal documents discuss that the new, "almost pathetically pro-Western" regime should be given gifts of surplus grain to "whet their appetite" for further U.S. support.[2] Nkrumah, who was living in exile in Guinea after the coup, described the economic aftermath of the coup in Chapters 5 and 6 of Dark Days in Ghana, where state-run enterprises and other resources were rapidly sold off:

The only Ghanaians to benefit from such a sell-out were the African middle-class hangers-on to neo-colonialist privilege and the neo-colonialist trading firms. For the mass of workers, peasants and farmers, the victims of the capitalist free-for-all, it meant a return to the position of "drawers of water and hewers of wood" to Western capitalism. [...] Businessmen from the U.S.A., from Britain, West Germany, Israel and elsewhere, flew into Ghana like vultures to grab the richest pickings. Virtually all the state-owned industries developed by my government were allowed to pass into private ownership. These included such enterprises as The Timber Products Corporation, The Cocoa Products Corporation, the Diamond Mining Corporation, the National Steel Works, the Black Star Shipping Line, Ghana Airways, and all the state-owned hotels.[7]

Economy

Due to IMF neocolonialism, the Ghanaian cedi has an inflation rate of over 40%.[8]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "History Timeline- Chronology of Important Events." West Africa, Early History. GhanaWeb. Archived 2023-03-13.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Komer, Robert W. "Memorandum From the President’s Acting Special Assistant for National Security Affairs (Komer) to President Johnson." Johnson Library, National Security File, Memos to the President. Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964–1968, Volume XXIV, Africa. Document #260. Office of the Historian. United States Department of State. Archived 2022-05-18.
  3. Charles Quist-Adade (2021-02-24). "How Did a Fateful CIA Coup—Executed 55 Years Ago this February 24—Doom Much of Sub-Saharan Africa?" CovertAction Magazine. Archived from the original on 2022-01-26. Retrieved 2022-08-03.
  4. Nkrumah, Kwame. Challenge of the Congo. 1967.
  5. Stockwell, John. In Search of Enemies: A CIA Story. 1978.
  6. Komer, Robert W. "Memorandum From Robert W. Komer of the National Security Council Staff to the President’s Special Assistant for National Security Affairs (Bundy)." Washington, May 27, 1965. Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964-1968. Volume XXIV, Africa. Document 253. Office of the Historian, United States Department of State. Archived 2023-03-11.
  7. Nkrumah, Kwame. Dark Days in Ghana. 1968. Lawrence & Wishart, London.
  8. Nino Brown (2022-12-01). "Interview with the Socialist Movement of Ghana: The IMF and the class struggle" Liberation News. Archived from the original on 2022-12-01. Retrieved 2022-12-02.