Why Some Ghanaians Express Support for Military Coups: History, Reality, and the Questions We Must Ask

Rising frustrations in Ghana spark debate as some express support for military coups. But history warns otherwise. Is this a call for change or a risk of regression? The answers demand deeper reflection on democracy, governance, and accountability in Ghana today.

In recent discussions on governance and social media discourse, a striking claim has emerged: that about 43% of Ghanaians justify military coups. While such figures often reflect survey-based perceptions rather than absolute national consensus, they reveal something deeper and more concerning a growing frustration with democratic governance and public institutions.

But what lies behind this sentiment? And more importantly, what are the real implications of such thinking for a country like Ghana?

A Brief Historical Background: Ghana and the Coup Era

To understand today’s attitudes, we must revisit Ghana’s political past. Since independence in 1957, Ghana has experienced multiple military interventions:

1966: Overthrow of Kwame Nkrumah
1972: Coup against the Busia government
1979: AFRC takeover under Jerry John Rawlings

1981: Another coup leading to PNDC rule under Rawlings until 1992

These events were often justified by the military as responses to corruption, economic decline, and political instability.

However, Ghana’s return to constitutional rule in 1992 marked a major turning point. Since then, the country has built one of the more stable democracies in West Africa with peaceful elections and peaceful transfers of power.

Yet, the memory of military rule still lingers in public consciousness, sometimes romanticized as “discipline-driven governance.”

Why Are Some Ghanaians Saying This Today?

The growing openness to coup justification does not emerge in a vacuum. It is often driven by a combination of social and economic pressures:

1. Economic hardship and inequality
Rising cost of living, unemployment, and inflation create frustration, especially among young people who feel excluded from national progress.

2. Perceived corruption and weak accountability

When citizens believe public officials are not punished for corruption, trust in democratic systems weakens.

3. Political polarization
Intense rivalry between major political parties often makes democracy appear as a cycle of promises rather than transformation.

4. Social media influence and misinformation

Online spaces can amplify extreme opinions, sometimes presenting military rule as a “quick fix” to complex governance problems.

5. Historical nostalgia
Some narratives idealize past military regimes as periods of order, overlooking their repression and human rights limitations.

The Critical Questions Nobody Wants to Ask

Beyond emotional reactions, several difficult questions must be confronted:

Can governance problems truly be solved by suspending constitutional rule?

Why do citizens lose confidence in democratic institutions in the first place?

Are young people being adequately included in economic and political decision-making?

What lessons from Ghana’s own coup history are being forgotten or ignored?

Most importantly:
Do those expressing support for coups fully understand what military rule actually entails in practice?

The Reality of Military Rule: What Is Often Overlooked

History across Africa and beyond shows that military regimes often come with severe restrictions:

Suspension of constitutions
Ban on political parties
Closure or strict control of media
Arbitrary arrests and detention
Limited or no freedom of speech and assembly

In most cases, citizens lose the very rights that allow them to criticize government in the first place.

Even in Ghana’s own history, periods of military rule were marked by both order in some areas and serious limitations on civil liberties in others. The idea that military intervention automatically leads to better governance is therefore historically inconsistent.

Effects on Citizens and National Development

If coup justification becomes normalized, even as an idea, it carries real consequences:

1. Economic instability
Investors typically avoid countries with uncertain political futures, leading to reduced jobs and slower growth.

2. Weakening democratic institutions
Continuous doubt about democracy reduces trust in elections, courts, and governance structures.

3. Social division
Debates around coups often deepen political polarization rather than solving underlying issues.

4. Risk of repeated cycles of instability

History shows that once military intervention becomes normalized, it can repeat itself, delaying long-term development.

What Is the Government Doing About This?

Rather than dismissing public frustration, Ghana’s democratic institutions have attempted various responses:

Civic education by bodies such as the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE)

Anti-corruption campaigns and institutional reforms

Youth employment and entrepreneurship initiatives

Strengthening media freedom and public accountability systems

Electoral reforms to improve transparency and trust

However, critics argue that these measures often fail to fully address the daily economic realities that drive public dissatisfaction.

The Deeper Issue: A Crisis of Trust, Not Just Politics

The conversation around coup justification is not simply about military vs. civilian rule. It is about trust trust in leadership, fairness, opportunity, and justice.

When citizens feel unheard, democracy begins to feel like a structure without substance. That is where dangerous alternatives start to look attractive, even if historically proven risky.

Conclusion: A Choice Between Frustration and Reflection

The growing acceptance of military coups in public discourse should not be ignored, but it also should not be romanticized. It is a signal not a solution.

Ghana’s democratic journey remains one of the most stable in the region, but stability does not mean perfection. The challenge ahead is not to replace democracy, but to deepen it in ways that respond to real economic and social pain.

Ultimately, the question is not whether people are angry but whether that anger is being channeled toward reform or toward regression.

Because history is clear: when constitutional governance collapses, it is rarely the powerful who lose the most it is ordinary citizens who pay the highest price.

By:
Patrick Belebang Yagsori
+233240292413
patrickbelebang@gmail.com

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

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