GUYANA
UNDER SIEGE
|
||
KWAME
NKRUMAH: THE FIGHT FOR INDEPENDENCE
|
Page 2 of 3 | (10 December 1947 - 6 March 1957) | |||||||
The fog-filtered African sun on 10 December, 1947, witnessed Kwame
Nkrumah's return to the Gold Coast, disembarking at Takoradi after an
absence of 12 years. He found a country still very much under British
colonial domination, but was soon aware that demand for major political
change was fermenting just beneath the surface. Wallace Johnson's communist
West African Youth League had infiltrated from Nigeria in 1937 and had
stirred the political pot throughout the Gold Coast. Johnson's star waned when he was convicted of sedition and deported
in 1938. However, he left behind the residue of discontent with colonialism
and a growing but leaderless demand for self-rule. The colonial government
moved quickly and decisively to suppress every contentious political movement.
Chiefs who showed any inclination towards independence were quickly destooled.
Anti-tax movements were rapidly suppressed. Suspect civil servants were
sacked and, in some cases, detained. Any challenge to British rule was
abruptly terminated. It was
into this period of suppression that Kwame Nkrumah arrived home. Within
days, he returned to his home at Nkroful for a brief family reunion. Word
spread quickly that Nkrumah was home and after a fortnight, he began a
series of speaking engagements and meetings in order to sense the level
of unrest that lay just beneath the surface throughout the country. A series
of meetings with the leadership of the United Gold Coast Convention, (UGCC),
founded on 4 August, 1947, and lead by Dr. J. B. Danquah, resulted, on
20 January, 1948, in the appointment of Nkrumah as General Secretary of
the Party. From that moment at Saltpond, the die was cast. The Gold Coast
had its' leader and was on a fixed and determined course towards independence
from Great Britain. Nkrumah
began an intense speaking tour throughout the country, and with his unique,
impassioned rhetoric, soon had the entire country seething with Pan-African
enthusiasm and demands for self-rule. Boycotts of European goods were
initiated, labor strikes became common place and work slowdowns began
in all areas of the Gold Coast's commerce and industry. The 28th
of February, 1948, was a landmark day in the nation's history. A large
contingent of former servicemen who were tired of unfulfilled promises
by the government, drafted a petition seeking redress of grievances for
presentation to H.M's Governor, Sir Gerald Creasy. As they marched, unarmed
and defenseless, they were set upon by government troops at Christianborg
cross-roads. When the smoke cleared, sixty-three former loyal soldiers
lay dead or badly wounded on the streets of Accra. Gold Coast would never
be the same. Rioting and looting lasted for five days. On 1 March,
1948, the Riot Act was read and Governor Creasy declared a state of emergency.
Strict press censorship was imposed over the entire country. On 12 March,
the Governor issued Removal Orders and police were dispatched to pick
up and arrest the entire UGCC Central Executive. Kwame Nkrumah, Dr. Danquah,
E. Akufo Addo, William Ofori Atta, E. Obelsebi Lamptey and E. Ako Adjei
were arrested, detained and exiled to the Northern Territories. On 14
March, 1948, Cape Coast students demonstrated, demanding the release of
the Party leadership. Once again, the government responded with great
force, leaving the dead and dying in its wake. Meanwhile,
the Colonial Office in London, greatly upset by events in the Gold Coast,
appointed a Commission, chaired by Mr. A. K. Watson, Recorder of Bury
St. Edmunds, with a mandate to investigate the reasons for the disturbances
and to make recommendations for the continued governance of the colony.
They began their in-country interviews and deliberations on 1 April, 1948. With the
country in chaos, Governor Creasy finally acceded to demands and on 12
April, 1948, the Party leadership was released from detention. On 19 April,
he lifted the 1 ½ month press ban. These actions served to superficially
quiet the country, but it did nothing to suppress the now flourishing
and rampant demand for self-rule. On 26
April, 1948, the Watson Commission concluded its deliberations and shortly
thereafter, presented its report to H.M.G. The principal recommendation
was that a Constitution be drafted as a possible prelude to eventual self-rule.
To that end, an all African Constitutional Committee was appointed under
the Chairmanship of an esteemed African jurist, Mr. Justice Henley Coussey
of the Gold Coast High Court. In the
meantime, Nkrumah toured the country addressing huge crowds of every persuasion,
every tribe, every religion and every class of society. "Self Government
Now" echoed throughout the land. The strength of the three words
grew at each speaking venue until it became the heartbeat of the country.
With adult public opinion rapidly falling into line, Nkrumah next moved
to mobilize the youth of the Gold Coast. On 26 February, 1949, he announced
the formation of the Committee on Youth Organization (CYO) designed to
bring young people actively into the political fray. At the
UGCC Easter Convention at Saltpond, Nkrumah rebuked the membership claiming
that they were not working hard enough, that they did not fully understand
and support his vision of self-rule. In a highly tense and acrimonious
exchange, Nkrumah tendered his resignation as General Secretary of the
party. On 12 June, 1949, at a CYO rally in Accra, Nkrumah announced the
formation of the Convention Peoples Party (CPP), calling for political
unity and a nationwide unified demand for self-rule. "If the Coussey
Committee does not find for self-rule now, we will shut this country down,
we will strike, strike, strike!" On 7 November,
1949, the Coussey Committee Report was published. Contained therein, were
a number of mechanisms for inclusion of Africans in government, but it
stopped short of advocating or even suggesting self-rule. While
the Coussey report was comprehensive and generally accepted by political
moderates, Nkrumah was furious because of its self-rule shortcomings.
He announced formation of the Ghana Representative Council (GRC) as the
principal body to initiate appeal against the report. Plans were announced
for a nationwide Positive Action strike to begin 1 January, 1950. He renewed
his nationwide tour, calling on "all men of goodwill, organize, organize,
organize. We prefer self-government in danger, to servitude in tranquillity.
Forward ever, backward never". The chant "Self-government now"
was taken up in every corner of the country. New Years
Day, 1950, dawned with labor shutdowns in every industrial and commercial
facility. Government responded immediately with a State of Emergency announced
by the Governor. Flying squads of the Gold Coast Constabulary swooped
down and arrested more than 200 CPP and CYO leaders, including Nkrumah. Arrests
and detentions did not stop the movement. Enough people stepped into the
leadership void to perpetuate the movement. The "Gold Coast Leader"
was initiated, first as a sub-rosa broadsheet and within a month, as a
widely distributed CPP propaganda newspaper. In the
meantime, the government accepted the Coussey Committee report and began
implementing its recommendations, beginning with municipal elections in
Accra on 8 April, 1950, Cape Coast on 12 June, 1950 and Kumasi on 4 November,
1950. CPP won in a landslide, to the shock and chagrin of H. M. G. Although
still in prison, Nkrumah recorded an extraordinary plurality of 22,780
votes out of 23,122 votes cast. On 19
February, 1951, the new Governor, Sir Noble Arden-Clarke, signed the Bill
of Release freeing Nkrumah and others from prison after 13 months of detention.
An invitation to State House on the day of his release resulted in Nkrumah
being asked to form a government and become Leader of Government Business
in the first African dominated government of the Gold Coast and the National
Assembly. Nkrumah accepted, but he warned the Governor that he considered
the Coussey generated Constitution to be "bogus, fraudulent and unacceptable,
as it does not fully meet the aspirations of the people of the Gold Coast".
He added that he would not rest "until full self-government within
the Commonwealth was achieved". With that statement, he announced
his first cabinet of 4 Europeans and 7 Africans. The die was now cast.
The sun would soon rise on a new nation, Ghana. For the
next year, Nkrumah focused his effort on the development of an equitable
constitution and creation of massive nationwide self-help schemes. Work
was begun on the enormous Volta River hydroelectric project and others
of national importance. On 5 March,
1952, Nkrumah was made Prime Minister. Work continued on a new Constitution.
The country's first Five Year Development Plan was published and through
its implementation, 9 Teacher Training Colleges, 18 Secondary Schools
and 31 Primary and Middle schools were built. In the Northern Territories,
10 new hospitals were built. Major roads were constructed linking Accra
and Cape Coast and Kumasi and from Tamale to Bolgatanga. Nkrumah
stepped up his pressure for negotiations for full Independence. Finally
on 18 September, 1956, the Secretary of State for the Colonies announced
a firm date for Gold Coast Independence, 6 March, 1957. On 12 November,
1956, a new Constitution was approved along with the nation's renewed
name, Ghana, after the ancient traditional Ghana Empire, the oldest known
state of West Africa, which flourished from the third to the seventeenth
century. On the appointed day, 6 March, 1957, the new nation was born. At midnight at Accra's Polo Grounds, Prime Minister Nkrumah announced that "the long battle is over and our beloved country Ghana is free forever". Always the Pan-Africanist, mindful of the rest of Africa, he said: "We again re-dedicate ourselves in the struggle to emancipate other countries in Africa, for our independence is meaningless unless it is linked up with the total liberation of the African continent |
||||||||
©
2001 Guyanaundersiege.com
|