Renowned press freedom champion, Charles Wereko-Brobby, has scored President Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo’s administration as having the worse press freedom record.
Dr Wereko-Brobby’s 24-hour-old Radio Eye – the first radio station – has gone into Ghana’s history of the first frontal attack against media subversion.
The radio operated for 24 hours in 1994 before it was shut down by security forces for broadcasting without a licence. That incident earned him the nickname ‘Tarzan’ after a minister likened his fight for media freedom to how Tarzan – a fictional character in a popular jungle story – jumps from tree to tree.
Having played an active part in the fight for press freedom since the inception of the Fourth Republic, when he appeared on PM Express Monday as the sole guest of the current affairs programme, Dr Wereko-Brobby’s contributions were steeped in historical facts.
His discussion of the topic for the show ‘Defending Media Freedom in Ghana’ was also hard-hitting and direct but thought-provoking.
When he was tasked by show host, Evans Mensah, to give his assessment of press freedom under current administration compared to the past governments’ he did not mince words.
“I wouldn’t want to give a ranking except to say that the current government has been the worst…in the Fourth Republic,” he was direct.
He justified his assessment: “It is not harsh…because in all the other Republics, there was the monopoly and monotony of GBC [state-owned Ghana Broadcasting Corporation] so there we were not really talking about press freedom.
“Here, through the actions of the one who occupies the position [President Akufo-Addo] and some of us, we have actually established pluralism which enables people to make choice. And what is happening now, both deliberately…and inadvertently, you are now creating a state of insurrection and silence that is being eroded.”
Ghana’s global ranking in press freedom lends credence to Dr Wereko-Brobby’s assessment.
Ghana has dropped four points in the latest ranking in the 2019 World Press Freedom Index from 23 to 27 from the previous year.
Worse, Ghana has also lost its status as Africa’s best-ranked country in the World Press Freedom Index, compiled annually by Reporters Without Borders (RWB) which evaluates the state of journalism in 180 countries.
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