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TANGO WITH AN ECOWAS EMBASSY
N. B. Andrews

November 06, 2015


There is enough empirical evidence to support this assertion about sub-Saharan Africa; nowhere is the day brighter or night darker- it is often plagued with cataclysms of biblical proportions.....most of the time self inflicted.

My latest tango with an ECOWAS Embassy in Ghana has caused me to play back the above ad infinitum.

"I am busy; you are wasting my time and tying up my phone. I am talking to my Foreign Minister and my President. Call me some other time; I have important things to do", said the Embassy Official.

"When should I call you back?", I asked.

"Oh, I will call you back after 12 noon, if I have time".

My watch read 9 am.

At 2 pm, she called to find out why I had sent people to her office. I assured her that I had sent no one to her office; that I was minding my own business in my office and had no knowledge of where her embassy is located.

At 4 pm, she called to apologise for her earlier insolence.

It was unclear whether the apology was for the salvo at 9 am or the 2 pm one; apology accepted- but this goes beyond the individual or personal.

The issue at stake is simple but important.

A paralysed ECOWAS national ( from a work related spine injury) had arrived in Ghana from his home country for surgical treatment but with a one way plane ticket.

I refuse to speculate why, as over the years, they have always arrived with a return ticket.

However, his travelling companion (his nephew) came with a return ticket.

No prior notification of his date or time of arrival was given. We heard he had arrived when the commercial plane touched down and there were no arrangements in place to get his stretcher off the aircraft or an ambulance to take him to a hospital.

The plot then begins to get murky.

His scanty medical records had completely misrepresented the extent and severity of his clinical condition. And the records were from a University Teaching Hospital- what a world!

We then delivered the care which he required; this took 30 days even though his budgeted care was only for 10 days.

Over the next several weeks while he was receiving medical care, all our attempts to reach his employers and family, in order to plan his return journey, proved futile.

One company official responded to our emails and informed us that he was in the US and therefore was not in a position to assist us in any way.

After he had been under our care for 30 days and was stable and well enough to travel, we contacted the embassy of his home country in Accra.

To their credit, they sent an official to see him in hospital. His status as their national was confirmed.

A few days later, a follow up call to the embassy yielded bizarre results.

That was when we started hearing the twaddle- the forte of public servants in our part of the world.

"Why are you calling him our national? Do not do that. He is not a government official so why should the Embassy get involved?

"He is a private individual working for a private company," was the first preposterous statement from the official on the embassy phone in our country.

I resisted the urge to utter a few audible imprecations and continued thus,

"Well, this involves the return home of your national and we have documentation which you have verified; do you not think it falls within your remit?

Can you not assist by contacting the airline and start negotiating on his behalf?

Can you not track down his relatives and employers in your country- his home country- and coordinate his return?",

And yes, I was thinking- can you not think a bit and get off your lazy backside and do some real work instead of kissing officialdom in the same area in order to secure your thirty pieces of silver.

In our region, our political class and public servants very often have an instinctive and crass contempt for the general public; there is a load of evidence to support this.

Their behavior regularly offers a brazen challenge to conventional notions of sanity and propriety. They act with impunity......almost as if they are in charge of a donkey or mule sanctuary, and if they are, then a not infrequent mule kick is in order.

On many occasions the incompetence of these officials has led to wantom loss of life, significant individual grief and suffering.

They are seldom held accountable; they know so and continue to think it will remain so.

Are we now to teach embassy officials their job or are we simply to accept the drivel that they put out at us?

My patience is for my patients; my cup runneth over.

I shall document; name and shame and engage, with the ferocity associated with the octagon.

So let the tango begin; after a few more steps we might have to name the embassy and the official.

If her apology was sincere then she should perform her duties with alacrity and get her national back home with dispatch.

His embassy owes this to him!

N.B. ANDREWS
Blebo We- Sakumo
Nov 6, 2015.

 

 

 

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