
| Atlas Ghana |
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Country
(long form) History After the demise of slavery, the British took over the forts to use as customs posts, signing treaties with many of the local chiefs. The Ashanti profited handsomely from the arrangements, and their capital, Kumasi, began to take on all the trappings of a European city. The British grew increasingly uneasy with the tribe's wealth and influence, and when in 1873 the Ashanti refused to give up Kumasi, the British sacked the city and declared the Gold Coast a crown colony. Violent Ashanti resistance continued until 1900, when the tribe attacked the British fort at Kumasi, losing the battle but almost entirely destroying the city in the process. The British set out to make the Gold Coast a showcase African nation, allowing few Europeans to settle or even be employed there. Cocoa exports became the backbone of the economy, followed by gold, timber, manganese, bauxite and diamonds. By WWI, the Gold Coast was the most prosperous colony in Africa, with the best schools and civil service, a cadre of enlightened lawyers and a thriving press. Still, anti-British sentiments ran deep. In the late 1920s, a number of political parties dedicated to regaining African independence began to emerge. In 1947, Kwame Nkrumah, the American-educated secretary general of the country's leading party, broke away from the group to form the Convention People's Party (CPP), aimed at the common person and pushing the slogan 'Self Government Now'. The CPP was an overnight sensation, and in 1949 Nkrumah brought the country to a halt by calling a national strike. The British responded by throwing him in prison, only to release him two years later after his party had won three general elections in his absence. Independence finally came in 1957, making Ghana - the name chosen by Nkrumah after the first great empire in West Africa - the first black African nation to win freedom from its colonisers. For Ghana, it was the beginning of almost 25 years of economic decline. Nkrumah borrowed heavily to finance the country. His most grandiose project, the Akosombo Dam on the Volta River, didn't bring the electrification and irrigation programs it promised for more than a decade. By 1966, Ghana was 1000000000.00 in debt. Nkrumah's excesses and the rampant corruption among his officials led to a popular army coup that same year. Between 1966 and 1981, Ghana suffered through six corrupt and incompetent governments, five of them military and each fostering resentment among Ghanaians. In May 1979, in the midst of serious food shortages, a group of young military officers led by Flight Lieutenant Jerry Rawlings staged another coup and began a series of 'house cleaning' operations that resulted in the sentencing and execution of several senior officers and former heads of state. Three months later, Rawlings' Armed Forces Revolutionary Council passed the reins to a civilian government following general elections, only to forcibly retake control two years later. Rawlings has been the head of state ever since. Military rule was formally brought to an end with the inauguration of the Fourth Republic on 9 January 1993, which was preceded by the adoption of a new constitution allowing political parties the freedom to organise. Popularly re-elected in 1996, President Rawlings' rule has seen Ghana's still-shaky economy move increasingly toward stabilisation and the country itself solidify its commitment to democracy. Another presidential election was due in 2000, but constitutionally Rawlings is not eligible to run again. However, he is likely to remain a political force if his wife, Konadu 'Nana' Agyeman-Rawlings, or his heir apparent, Professor John Atta-Mills, becomes president. With the appointment of Ghanaian Kofi Annan as UN secretary general, national hopes are high that Ghana - a country with a wealth of human and natural resources - will again take on a leading role in Africa. In December 2000 a new political era was heralded as the conservative liberal New Patriotic Party (NPP) of John Agyekum Kufuort won both the parliamentary and presidential elections, ousting President Jerry Rawlings after 20 years in power. Kufuor, a mild-mannered, Oxford-educated lawyer known as the 'Gentle Giant', continued Rawlings’ liberal economic policies and accepted a debt-relief scheme designed by the IMF. The subsequent removal of fuel subsidies sent petrol prices skyrocketing by 60%. Despite this rocky start, Kufuor’s party remains popular. In 2002 the president inaugurated a South Africa-style truth and reconciliation commission to look into human rights abuses committed mainly under Rawlings’ military rule. It is alleged that some 300 people 'disappeared' under that regime. Whether this investigation will heal the wounds of the past remains to be seen.
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