Elizabeth Ohene Takes BBC To Task

The national broadcaster of the United Kingdom, BBC, has been taken to task by its former worker, Elizabeth Ohene, over the media organisation’s programme which suggested that Ghana’s free speech was under attack.

Having worked with the BBC for 14 years from 1986 to December 2000, the renowned Ghanaian journalist believes the BBC has lost history and context in its programmes, intimating, “These days, it’s hard to discern that sometimes in your programmes.”

In an open letter to the international media organisation Madam Ohene said the BBC is primarily a news organisation and assumed that those who work there and make programmes are primarily journalists, and that people do not expect that the BBC would only defend journalists and programmes from other jurisdictions that meet its own standards.

“But when the BBC starts a programme that purports to be about Ghana’s free speech being under attack, with a man whose claim to fame seems to be how scurrilous he can be about his opponents, who makes no attempt to be factual and who uses the most obscene language to describe Ghana’s First Lady at every opportunity, I have to wonder about the BBC.”

“Have the editors of the programme determined that this is a journalist, doing a professional job who is being muzzled and attacked?” she quizzed.

She said the programme cited Barker-Vormawor, who is now having blush with the law in Ghana, to buttress its point, noting, “I perfectly understand that for the BBC, someone who is a PhD student in Cambridge, is in a rarefied stratosphere and cannot and should not be challenged by the authorities of a third world country” like Ghana.

“Did the editors of the programme take into consideration in making a judgment about Mr Barker-Vormawor that he had worked in the office of the two preceding Presidents who are in opposition to the current government?” Ms Ohene, who was the Minister of Education under the Kuffuor administration from January 2001 to January 2009, asked rhetorically.

“A bit of history here again might be useful. Back in 1981, the BBC did a programme on how the authorities in Ghana had the security services following Flt-Lt Jerry Rawlings and his friend Capt. (Rtd) Kojo Tsikata on suspicion they were plotting the violent overthrow of the government.”

“The 1981 programme lamented the abuse of freedoms under the Constitution. Not too long after this programme was broadcast, a coup was staged, the government was overthrown and Flt-Lt Rawlings and Capt. Tsikata were the architects of that coup.”

“Another bit of history to further make the point. Before I joined the BBC in September 1986, I had established a weekly newsmagazine on West African affairs in London that I called Talking Drums which I ran between August 1983 and July 1986 until when it collapsed.”

“During this time, there was the miners’ strike in the UK. I wrote in the Talking Drums an article, that said if the things that were happening in the UK had been happening in Ghana, some would have said conditions were ripe for a coup d’état and there would be enough justification for the coup citing the daily complaints made by Mr Arthur Scargill about police brutality,” she recounted.

Madam Ohene disclosed that she remembered the BBC World Service invited her to be interviewed, and that they were so shocked and scandalized that she would suggest a possibility of a coup in Great Britain.

“I lived in the UK when the Council Tax was introduced; my recollection is there was a stronger objection to it than anything I’ve seen against the E-Levy here. I don’t remember that anyone suggested the British Army should therefore intervene to save the suffering British people,” she intimated.

She questioned whether the editors of the programme on Ghana’s free speech think campaigning against a tax measure means advocating for a military overthrow of an elected government.

“Would that be because this is a West African country and not Great Britain?” she quizzed again and said the BBC again featured a third person, whom the organisation identified as Lateef and cited the man’s alleged experience in the programme.

“I’m afraid [Lateef’s account] was unknown to me and I’m now trying to find more about it. All the same, the events recounted by Mr Lateef sound to me like Police misconduct more than the government trying to clamp down on free speech,” she submitted.

“This current government in Ghana has been trying to clamp down on illegal mining since it came into office in 2017. As a result of this policy, it lost many parliamentary seats in the 2020 elections when the opposition party campaigned in the mining areas, they would stop the clamp down if elected.”

“It’s difficult, therefore, to see how a journalist doing stories on illegal mining would attract the ire of the government to lead to the journalist being targeted for manhandling,” she posited.

According to her, it was said in the BBC programme at many points that the government had been asked for comments and had not offered any.

“I have asked and been assured that neither the Minister of Information nor the Director of Communications at the Office of the President had been contacted by anyone to comment on the story by the producers of the programme,” Elizabeth Ohene pointed out.

For her, the National Media Commission, which is the independent, constitutionally mandated body that deals with issues of press freedom and the protection of journalists was also not contacted for comments on the BBC’s programme.

“I am very sorry to have to say that I am not impressed with your reliance on the West African Media Foundation. Unfortunately, they are no longer in my estimation, in a position to offer unbiased opinions on this government. [There is] nothing wrong with such a position just as long as it is labelled as such.”

She said she did not intend to write such a long treatise and apologise, asserting, “I feel strongly about the BBC, having spent such a long part of my working life with the organisation.”

Ohene recounted her experience in January 1982, when she was forced to leave Ghana in a hurry because she heard on “the car radio, a directive from the new authorities that had overthrown the constitutionally elected government that I should report at the Military camp.”

“I had written an article in the state owned newspaper on which I was working, that it was up to the people of Ghana to vote out the government if they were not satisfied with the performance of the government and no group of soldiers or people had the right to overthrow the government and tell us how badly it was doing,” she said.

She disclosed that she ended up in exile for 19 years, and explained that she had been at the receiving end of the intolerance of the expression of divergent views.

“A lot of water has passed under the bridge since January 1982 and Ghana now prides itself on being a multi-party democracy with a vibrant press.

She concluded, “The BBC used to always have some history and context. These days, it’s hard to discern that sometimes in your programmes.”

By Ernest Kofi Adu

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