Political, traditional power overlap, cause of conflicts - Expert Ghana News Agency , 20/11/2009
The power overlap between
politicians and traditional
authorities has mainly been blamed for the increasing rate of
conflicts in the country, particularly in northern Ghana.
Mr Donald Amuah, a conflict resolution
expert, said this power overlap had caused unending feuds orchestrated mostly
by these two groups.
He was addressing the 13th
Biennial Plenary Assembly of the Tamale Ecclesiastical Province Pastoral
Conference (TEPPCON) of the Catholic
Church at Damongo in the West
Gonja Districton Wednesday.
TEPPCON is the Catholic
Church's outfit that undertakes sensitization outreach programmes through
dialogue, mediation and conflict resolution to help reduce conflicts in the
three Northern Regions
Mr Amuah said: "In Ghana, the powers of political and
traditional leaders overlap and they interrelate causing competition over
access to traditional state structures resulting in these conflicts".
He said both political and
traditional conflicts were "symbiotic and feed on each other with a
linkage to historical colonial rule where traditional power was interfered by
the colonial masters and had since been perpetuated since Ghana became a Republic."
Mr. Amuah therefore urged
both traditional and political leadership to stop their "selfish
interest" and fight for the collective interest as a sure way of
minimising conflicts.
The Most Reverend Philip
Naameh, the Metropolitan Archbishop of Tamale and President of TEPPCON, said
the Catholic Church had since the inception of TEPPCON, taken some initiatives
to promote peace, unity and self-reliance.
He said human security was at the centre of the
Church's evangelism through the promotion of the welfare of the people and
their spiritual upliftment.
Mr Stephen Sumani Nayina,
the Northern Regional Minister, in a speech read for him expressed the
government's appreciation and gratitude to the leadership of the Catholic
Church in Ghana for its contribution to national development.
He appealed to the church, as a partner in
development, to continue to support the government in areas of education,
health, agriculture and the proposed Savannah Accelerated Development Authority
(SADA).