Ghana GHANA AND THE RAWLINGS ERA
A military shrine of an asafo company, Fante
people, coastal region
Courtesy life in general (Brook, Rose, and Cooper Le Van)
On May 15, 1979, less than five weeks before constitutional
elections were to be held, a group of junior officers led by Flight
Lieutenant Jerry John Rawlings attempted a coup. Initially
unsuccessful, the coup leaders were jailed and held for courtmartial . On June 4, however, sympathetic military officers
overthrew the Akuffo regime and released Rawlings and his cohorts
from prison fourteen days before the scheduled election. Although
the SMC's pledge to return political power to civilian hands
addressed the concerns of those who wanted civilian government, the
young officers who had staged the June 4 coup insisted that issues
critical to the image of the army and important for the stability
of national politics had been ignored. Naomi Chazan, a leading
analyst of Ghanaian politics, aptly assessed the significance of
the 1979 coup in the following statement:
Unlike the initial SMC II [the Akuffo period, 1978-1979]
rehabilitation effort which focused on the power elite, this second
attempt at reconstruction from a situation of disintegration was
propelled by growing alienation. It strove, by reforming the
guidelines of public behavior, to define anew the state power
structure and to revise its inherent social obligations. . . .
In retrospect the most irreversible outcome of this phase was
the systematic eradication of the SMC leadership. . . . [Their]
executions signaled not only the termination of the already
fallacious myth of the nonviolence of Ghanaian politics, but, more
to the point, the deadly serious determination of the new
government to wipe the political slate clean.
Rawlings and the young officers formed the Armed Forces
Revolutionary Council (AFRC). The armed forces were purged of
senior officers accused of corrupting the image of the military. In
carrying out its goal, however, the AFRC was caught between two
groups with conflicting interests, Chazan observed. These included
the "soldier-supporters of the AFRC who were happy to lash out at
all manifestations of the old regimes; and the now organized
political parties who decried the undue violence and advocated
change with restraint.
Despite the coup and the subsequent executions of former heads
of military governments (Afrifa of the NLC; Acheampong and some of
his associates of the NRC; and Akuffo and leading members of the
SMC), the planned elections took place, and Ghana had returned to
constitutional rule by the end of September 1979. Before power was
granted to the elected government, however, the AFRC sent the
unambiguous message that "people dealing with the public, in
whatever capacity, are subject to popular supervision, must abide
by fundamental notions of probity, and have an obligation to put
the good of the community above personal objective." The AFRC
position was that the nation's political leaders, at least those
from within the military, had not been accountable to the people.
The administration of Hilla Limann, inaugurated on September 24,
1979, at the beginning of the Third Republic, was thus expected to
measure up to the new standard advocated by the AFRC.
Limann's People's National Party (PNP) began the Third Republic
with control of only seventy-one of the 140 legislative seats. The
opposition Popular Front Party (PFP) won forty-two seats, while
twenty-six elective positions were distributed among three lesser
parties. The percentage of the electorate that voted had fallen to
40 percent. Unlike the country's previous elected leaders, Limann
was a former diplomat and a noncharismatic figure with no personal
following. As Limann himself observed, the ruling PNP included
people of conflicting ideological orientations. They sometimes
disagreed strongly among themselves on national policies. Many
observers, therefore, wondered whether the new government was equal
to the task confronting the state.
The most immediate threat to the Limann administration,
however, was the AFRC, especially those officers who organized
themselves into the "June 4 Movement" to monitor the civilian
administration. In an effort to keep the AFRC from looking over its
shoulder, the government ordered Rawlings and several other army
and police officers associated with the AFRC into retirement;
nevertheless, Rawlings and his associates remained a latent threat,
particularly as the economy continued its decline. The first Limann
budget, for fiscal year (
FY--see Glossary) 1981, estimated the
Ghanaian inflation rate at 70 percent for that year, with a budget
deficit equal to 30 percent of the
gross national product (
GNP--see Glossary). The Trade Union Congress
claimed that its workers were
no longer earning enough to pay for food, let alone anything else.
A rash of strikes, many considered illegal by the government,
resulted, each one lowering productivity and therefore national
income. In September the government announced that all striking
public workers would be dismissed. These factors rapidly eroded the
limited support the Limann government enjoyed among civilians and
soldiers. The government fell on December 31, 1981, in another
Rawlings-led coup.
Data as of November 1994
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