
Head of Policy Monitoring and Evaluation at the presidency, Dr. Tony Aidoo has condemned what he says is the total disregard for law and order in the country.
He said there has been a considerable increase in the extent to which indiscipline has eaten into the every fabric of the society in the country.
Tony Aidoo was speaking on Asempa FM's Ekosii Sen programme Friday.
He recalled how Ghanaians used to be courteous, had respect for the elderly and rule of law, drove carefully on the roads and were passionate about the development of the nation.
Unfortunately almost everything has changed, he observed.
"We did not grow up like this; we were not trained like this. We are brought up to fear the law, we respected our elders but today we don't see that. No one respects elderly people [because] we believe we are all equal and therefore we can do whatever we like. This is not the best foundation to build a nation on," Mr Aidoo exclaimed.
He said life has become very cheap in Ghana these days because people get killed at major cities and we see it as normal.
"When you have this kind of situation then the society is simply not normal. If you [monitor] the international media, you will find out that even a single act of murder against one person gets considerable media attention but in Ghana seven people die and we think it is normal."
He expressed worry about the widespread and pervasive display of indiscipline especially in the public sector and its detrimental effect on our national psyche and system.
"At the worst kind you have sheer corruption; public servants refusing to work in accordance with the standards expected, you find doctors and pharmacists leave their post and go on strike and expect to be paid," he bewailed.
The head for Monitoring and Evaluation at the presidency noted that Ghanaians have become more corrupt, disrespectful, partisan and indiscipline which have negative effects on national unity, productivity and nation building.
Tony Aidoo called on government to crack the whip on indiscipline to create a viable foundation for a national consciousness.
"We must insist on discipline on conduct. People will not obey the law simply by education. If there is the need for education it must be punitive to send a message to the people that the lawlessness can no longer be tolerated in this country," he stressed.


How 70-year-old building was finally demolished over fear of collapse in Osu
Minority MPs thank Afenyo-Markin for capacity-building programme in Canada
Ghana has everything needed to prosper yet graduates remain unemployed — Dr Step...
June 9: Cedi sells at GHS12.50 on forex market, GHS11.85 on BoG interbank
Stephen Amoah advocates mixed market economy to tackle rising cost of living in ...
Publish a clear and detailed BoG recapitalisation plan — NPP urges gov't
Completely abandon idea of selling BoG headquarters — NPP urges gov't
French President Macron to attend Ghana's Next Steps Conference on Reparatory Ju...
Nyinahin Catholic SHS teacher seen fighting female student in viral video arrest...
Trump gets a cold reception at NBA Finals game as Spurs beat Knicks

Comments
i think it's shameful to see a loving country like ours in these lawlessness, disrispect, corruption, etc. good example must start from the above {gov.}. authority must take place.