Nkrumah Didn’t Die For Ghanaians to be silenced!

When I saw that yesterday’s HL prompt was focused on freedom of speech, I told myself “Ahhh beautiful day to bring my country’s problems to public attention”.

If you’re very active especially in the political community on X, it is very likely that you have recently seen the #FreeTheCitizens movement that Ghanaians have been making noise about recently. Maybe you didn’t know the basis or context of that movement, but it has been for very good reason.

The #FreeTheCitizens movement was preceded by #StopGalamseyNow movement. Galamsey is basically illegal mining of gold. It’s a local word coined from “gather them and sell”. It’s been going on for years in Ghana. However, its effects have not been as visible as it is now. The only source of drinking water to the communities in which this mining activities take place have been completely destroyed.

This is not one of the waterbodies affected by Galamsey, but I can promise you those look worse than this

Their water has become both dirty and poisoned in the literal sense of the word. Even worse, the destruction to their water bodies is not just ending there, but because water bodies are connected, the dirt and brownness is spreading to larger water bodies, among which the Weija Dam which is the main water treatment plant for Accra is a notable mention. Pregnant women are giving birth to children with deformities because of these poisoned waters they consume, and the communities are starving because their waters that used to be inhabited by fish is barren now.


This is not about the #StopGalamseyNow movement

This is what led to the #StopGalamseyNow movement. Citizens came out to peacefully protest, and our government had them arrested and locked up. This move of oppression of their freedom of speech led to the #FreeTheCitizens movement. More peaceful demonstrations are still happening and unfortunately, so are incarcerations, but the Ghanaian people are not fazed anymore because we’ve had enough!
I am sure that our government believed arresting the first batch of protesters would’ve intimidated and hushed people up, but we thank him a lot for fueling people’s anger even more to demand what should be given them normally. That arrest has fueled an uproar which I believe will eventually result in strategic steps being taken to address the matter. It has awoken Ghanaians up to the fact that staying quiet is no longer an option.

Quite honestly, the incident makes you question whether our government has forgotten what freedom of speech is. Constitution aside, should we be arresting human beings who are peacefully demanding to be treated better? For their most basic human right to be protected.

In an entirely different light, it is important to note that whiles we have our rights to free speech, other people have it too. That aside, it is also within people’s rights and capacities to sue you for exercising your freedom of speech carelessly. That is the basis of the popular saying that your freedom OF speech is guaranteed, but your freedom AFTER speech is not.

I’ll use Bongo Ideas again as the scape goat for this point. He made a reputation for himself in the Ghanaian X community as the person who said everything and everything to anyone without any sort of repercussions. Our own Verydarkman. Lol. Anyways, some months ago he made a controversial X post about the first lady of Ghana and that apparently turned out to have been the last controversy he would talk about for a short while.😂😂

Even this example still demonstrates that our freedom of speech can not be taken from us. Buuuuuut…. We can be held accountable for exercising our freedom of speech. Sometimes this accountability can translate to your future freedom of speech being taken from you, like we saw in Bongo’s case.😂😂


All images here are mine

Posted Using InLeo Alpha



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6 comments
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I thought it was only here in Nigeria that our leaders take extreme measures just cause citizens are airing their view. Although here, the leaders can literally open fire on their own citizens and then go ahead to gaslight the entire world that it never happened. Scary place, this West Africa.

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Yeah, I'm very well aware of the open fire part. The gaslighting the world it never happened does sound new to me though. What happened exactly?

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I still don't understand which book of governance our government officials are reading. It is never a good idea to use force to silence the protesters, it will only escalate the matter. The same tactics is used in my country to prevent people from expressing their opinion but it has only further lead to more civil unrest.

Freedom of speech is limited by specific policies to prevent humans from abusing it but there are times whereby this same policies are used to silence people regardless of the intention.

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Yeah, I've heard of some cases of obstruction of freedom of speech of Nigerian citizens and the uproars that have arrised from them. The most notable one I remember was I think in 2021, with the ENDSARS movement. At the time, Nigeria felt like what Palestine is now, except, the open fire in this case was from the country's own government. It's great that we're rising up against the injustices that are done against us now by our governments.

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