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Nana Oye Lithur Is The Best NDC Woman For The Job

Feature Article Nana Oye Lithur
SAT, 02 FEB 2013
Nana Oye Lithur

I really couldn't care less about the ongoing heavily blighted and outright scandalous vetting exercise in Ghana's parliament for reasons well known to avid readers of my articles and columns.

Personally, I believe that it is a fundamentally otiose exercise in futility and economic wastefulness, as the illegitimate Mahama government will sooner than most National Democratic Congress (NDC) supporters and sympathizers can fathom be chucked into the proverbial dustbin of history, never to be recalled again for a long time to come.

The foregoing notwithstanding, I still feel compelled to put those petty-minded people speciously parading under the guise of refined religious and civic leadership in their place, particularly those hell-bent on savagely scapegoating the Minister-Designate for Gender, Children and Social Protection for their own personal inadequacies and moral insecurities (See “I Have Never Said That Homosexuality Should Be Promoted – Nana OyeLithur” Peacefmonline.com 1/30/13).

Other than her funny last name, for I am unabashedly an African traditional nomenclaturist, Nana OyeLithur clearly appears to be the best qualified NDC woman for the job.

And on a good day, and in a good mood, I could even make bold to unflappably assert that she is simply the best human rights advocate for the job presently in the country. I have fairly studiously followed her fiery activism from the safe and civilized distance of my “comfortable” perch in New York City, as one of my legion critics recently snapped, for some time now and can only express my unreserved respect and admiration for my sister.

I may not like the fleering bastard with whom she showers and sleeps at night, but that, of course, is my own personal bowl of “Oblayo.”

Now I don't know about the “Social Protection” aspect of her portfolio –I thought it belonged to the Interior Minister – but if it means protecting the human and civil rights of those legally designated as LGBT, then I am all the more for her being named to the job.

In other words, I would rather have Nana OyeLithur “protect” our pretty young women from the lecherous and adulterous self-righteous pulpit pontiffs than have the latter shamelessly and hypocritically paper over their bloody crimes with the veritable red-herring that is homosexual scapegoating. And, by the way, have we finished talking about the number of clergy-induced abortion this youthful year alone?

I also happen to believe that the re-designation of the former Ministry of Women's and Children's Affairs by the rag-tag Mahama government is quite in good taste. Pronouncing the name of the same ministry under the Kufuor administration was rather too much of a mouthful for me – I mean, Ministry for Women's or even Women and Children's Affairs? That sounded a bit un-poetic and amateurish.

Then again, whoever accused Ghanaian politics and Ghanaian politicians of being critical and creative thinkers when it comes to the palatable packaging of ministerial portfolios for public consumption?

In other words, the constant relabeling of ministerial sectors and portfolios almost quadrennially, or after every general election, ought to be disciplined. And on the latter score, I call on Ghana's parliament to lay down a systematic protocol for designating and re-designating cardinal government ministries and agencies.

About the only aspect of her human rights advocacy with which I am virulently in disagreement, is Nana OyeLithur's rather amazingly contradictory assertion that while, indeed, as a human rights activist lawyer she believes in the right of homosexuals to be socially and/or civically protected, nevertheless, she had never publicly advocated for the legalization of homosexuality.

That makes her sound quizzically schizophrenic, like most of the key NDC operatives. The fact of the matter is that here we have President Mahama promoting homosexuality – you may choose to call it “bisexuality” – by naming Mr. KwesiBekoeAmissah-Arthur as his running-mate and now Vice-President, and then having Nana OyeLithur, his vanguard “protector” of the most vulnerable and marginalized in Ghanaian society, tell the world that she does not, after all, believe in the “Legal Existence of Homosexuals.”

Come on, Nana Oye, get off such cheap and tawdry rhetoric of political expediency!

*Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., Ph.D.
Department of English
Nassau Community College of the State University of New York

Garden City, New York
Jan. 30, 2013
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Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., PhD
Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., PhD, © 2013

Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., PhD, taught Print Journalism at Nassau Community College of the State University of New York, Garden City, for more than 20 years. He is also a former Book Review Editor of The New York Amsterdam News.. More He holds Bachelor of Arts (Summa Cum Laude) in English, Communications and Africana Studies from The City College of New York of The City University of New York, where he was named a Ford Foundation Undergraduate Fellow and the first recipient of the John J. Reyne Artistic Achievement Award in English Poetry (Creative Writing) in 1988.

The author was part of the "socially revolutionary" team of undergraduate journalists at City College of New York (CCNY) of the City University of New York (CUNY), who won First-Prize certificates for Best Community Reporting from the Columbia University School of Journalism, for three consecutive years, from 1988 to 1990.

Born April 8, 1963, in Ghana; naturalized U.S. citizen; son of Kwame (an educator) and Dorothy (maiden name, Sintim) Okoampa-Ahoofe; children: Abena Aninwaa, Kwame III. Ethnicity: "African." Education: City College of the City University of New York, B.A. (summa cum laude), 1990; Temple University, M.A., 1993, Ph.D., 1998. Politics: Independent. Religion: "Christian—Ecumenist." Hobbies and other interests: Political philosophy.

CAREER: Ghana National Cultural Center, Kumasi, poet, 1979–84; Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, worked as instructor in English; Technical Career Institutes, New York, NY, instructor in English, 1991–94; Indiana State University, Terre Haute, instructor in history, 1994–95; Nassau Community College, Garden City, NY, member of English faculty. Participant in World Bank African "Brain-Gain" pilot project.

MEMBER: Modern Language Association of America, National Council of Teachers of English, African Studies Association, Community College Humanities Association.

AWARDS, HONORS: Essay award, Nassau Review, 1999.
Column: Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., PhD

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