The 2012 presidential candidate of the Convention Peoples’ Party, Dr. 
Abu Sakara Foster says the reconstitution of the board of the Savannah 
Accelerated Development Authority, SADA, has come too late to save it 
from the troubles created.
President Mahama reconstituted the board this month to help the 
Authority achieve its’ prime aim of bridging the development gap between
 those in the north and south of Ghana.
But in a statement, Dr. Sakara says the reconstitution should have come earlier.
"It is therefore with a sigh of relief that recent changes in the Board
 of SADA are welcomed even though there has been no tacit admission that
 these changes are in response to the public outcry over perceived 
corruption in the administration of SADA.
“These changes by themselves do not go far enough to really turn around
 the fortunes of SADA. It has come too late to save the buoyant national
 support that SADA previously enjoyed!"
BELOW IS HIS FULL STATEMENT
Restore Belief in SADA
The Savannah Accelerated Development Agency (SADA) was initiated with 
high hopes of bridging the development gap between Ghana's poorest areas
 in the north and the rest of the country. At its beginning SADA was the
 one thing on which all political and social fronts agreed. This 
laudable national initiative brought out the best in us. After all 
everyone had a hand in bringing SADA to fruition in its transition from 
NDF under NPP to SADA under the NDC administration. The very act of 
reaching a national consensus on bridging the north-south development 
divide was uplifting and felt like the healing  of "gaping wound' in our
 national development psyche had began. It is now sad that SADA for many
 is tragically mired in controversy and acrimony  over charges of gross 
misappropriation of public funds.
This is not just a disappointment, it is a crushing indictment on our 
capacity to seek the greater common good even when we agree on the 
approach. It is for this reason that we must do everything to restore 
our belief in SADA, because it represents our belief in ourselves and 
the common good of our nation.
We must not rest on our "oars" for business as usual because committees
 of enquiry have been set up.  Investigative reports alone will not stem
 the tide of criticism because there is a sense that denial by 
officialdom is tantamount to saying changes are not needed.
It is therefore with a sigh of relief that recent changes in the Board 
of SADA are welcomed even though there has been no tacit admission that 
these changes are in response to the public outcry over perceived 
corruption in the administration of SADA. These changes by themselves do
 not go far enough to really turn around the fortunes of SADA. It has 
came too late to save the buoyant national support that  SADA previously
 enjoyed! The delay allowed the allegations, discontent and mistrust to 
fester for too long.
Those who offered advice quietly were themselves left in a state of 
frustration as it seemed that Government officials and the past SADA 
Board dug in defensively for business as usual.  If SADA is to succeed 
as we all wish then the new board must break visibly with the past. If 
the truth be told, the new Board of SADA must now work harder than ever 
before to restore the public's belief in SADA. They must immediately 
ensure that SADA's system of procurement of technical assistance and 
goods breaks links with the old system of service providers and 
suppliers. There must be greater transparency and scrutiny with less 
political interference to ensure SADA is perceived as being finally free
 from the influences of  "old boys" networks and "kokofu" football 
tactics. The new Board must strictly ensure that those who serve as 
advisors are not under any circumstances allowed to serve as 
consultants. Additionally the Board must appoint a new CEO who is not 
associated with the past.
The Board must support him/her to take immediate  measures that will 
ensure a change in work ethic and attitudes as they build a good mix of 
representative staff competencies based on merit and not political 
affiliation. Attention should be given to building credibility in the 
institution of SADA by asserting its independence in decision making 
about its orientation, focus and implementation processes.
Government officials and leaders should not take for granted the tacit 
public support SADA once enjoyed across the political spectrum. The 
silence of many who support SADA has been mistaken as acquiescence or 
complicity in the charges leveled against a few individuals. I urge my 
fellow country men and women not to "throw the baby out with the bath 
water". SADA is too important to our nation for it to descend from the 
high moral ground of political consensus into the pit of partisan 
politics.
Let us give the new SADA Board our support and encourage them to rise 
to the challenge. We however demand of them a sustained effort and 
insistence to right the wrongs of the past as a first step to restore 
credibility. A key part of that is their commitment not to bury any past
 wrong doing under the carpet!  The benefit of doubt we give them is 
contingent on their resolve to ensure that SADA is turned around to 
serve the interests of the many and not the objectives of the few. The 
public irrespective of ethnic or political affiliation will not tolerate
 anything less than full disclosure in this particular case.
The branding of all notable persons who hail from the north as part of a
 complicit northern elite is a disturbing aspect of the conversations 
that have surrounded the credibility of SADA's leadership. Many 
respected persons who hail from the north sought a way of intervening to
 help resolve the controversy surrounding SADA. The option of giving 
advice precluded participation in public criticism. That approach must 
not miss opportunity to call for a new beginning for SADA now that it 
has a new board in place.
The new board must ask the right questions to lay the foundations for a
 new path for SADA.  For example the SADA initiative was placed in the 
office of the vice President under the Mills administration to give it 
the gravitas and push needed to work across multi-sectoral lines with 
the vice President as its champion. Why has this not been visibly 
replicated under the Mahama administration as an affirmation of the 
correctness of that decision? Is the gravitas of a vice President as 
champion of SADA no longer necessary?  This question and others 
pertaining to the focus of SADA as a facilitatory tool for emphasis on 
strategic interventions must be clarified for the new board to chart a 
correct path for new management.
The interest of all Ghanaians who whole heartedly embraced the SADA 
initiative is that we formulate  a national tool that can be used to 
more effectively redress the imbalances in our national development 
wherever they occur. It is my vision and dream that ultimately a 
National Accelerated Development Agency could be established  to channel
 ring fenced funding from our national oil reserve funds into strategic 
interventions coordinated from within relevant sectors by multi-sectoral
 task force teams.
This will provide an avenue for more effective spending of our money  
to reduce transaction costs for industry and agriculture so as to 
enhance our competitiveness through productivity increase. Such tight 
and targeted spending will also protect us from vulnerability to 
corruption and also reduce the leakages and wastage associated with 
mainstream budget funding.
Many who supported SADA did so in pursuit of balanced development in 
the national interest. Some of us will also want to see in time an 
operational  Western Accelerated Development Agency (WADA) and an 
Eastern Corridor Accelerated Development Agency (ECADA). The deployment 
of these other initiatives to achieve a pervasive impact on wealth 
creation and poverty reduction in our economy depends on the success of 
SADA, the first of their kind.. Restoring belief in SADA should be a 
high priority for the new board. We should all wish the new Board of 
SADA good luck and God speed in our national interest.
Dr. Michael Abu Sakara Foster
Presidential Candidate 2012
Convention People's Party

 
 
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