In his quiet workshop in Accra, 33-year-old Antwi, a talented mechanic, sits dejectedly. Just months in the past, he bought two of his prized possessions – his vehicles – and spent a staggering 3,000 Canadian {dollars} (approximately GH¢35, 000) on what he thought was his ticket to a greater life.
Instead, he discovered himself stranded in Côte d’Ivoire, sufferer to an elaborate rip-off that promised Canadian shores however delivered solely heartbreak.
Since returning to Ghana, the dissatisfied migrant has taken to social media to share his story and warn potential travellers about journey scams, hoping to choose his life again after being stripped of every little thing.
Although Antwi couldn’t make it to Canada, his story paints stark illustration of a rising disaster in Ghana: the mass exodus of its youth, driven by a cocktail of desperation, aspiration, and, typically, naivety.
The attract of ‘Jakpa’
Social media platforms are abuzz with discussions about “jakpa” – the colloquial time period for fleeing one’s house nation. The promise of “right systems” in developed nations, coupled with desires of high quality training and gainful employment, has created a siren music too energyful for a lot of younger Ghanaians to withstand.
The numbers paint a grim image. According to the Thematic Report on Migration 2021, over 77 per cent of Ghanaian emigrants fall between the ages of 20 and 49. Europe claims 37 per cent of those hopefuls, whereas 23.7 per cent set their sights on the Americas.
But maybe most alarming is a 2021 examine by Child Rights International (CRI), which revealed that 55 per cent of kids aged 12-17 envisioned leaving Ghana by 2040. Their considerations? Jobs, training, and the attract of a better lifestyle overseas.
The root of despair
Ghana’s youth exodus is symptomatic of deeper points plaguing the nation. Successive governments have struggled to deal with endemic issues equivalent to youth unemployment and entrenched poverty.
The Ghana Statistical Service’s newest Multidimensional Poverty Report paints a sobering image: over 7.3 million Ghanaians are multi-dimensionally poor, disadvantaged not simply financially however in essential social indicators like well being, training, and dwelling requirements.
A democracy beneath risk
As younger Ghanaians flee, they take with them not simply their abilities and potential, but in addition their civic engagement. This mind drain poses a significant risk to Ghana’s democracy, a priority that weighs closely on establishments just like the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE).
Moreover, home challenges together with breakdown of social and ethical values, public apathy, weak public establishments, poor legislation enforcement, violent extremism and terrorism are more and more threatening Ghana’s democracy and the NCCE must be tactical in coping with them as its mandate calls for.
Established beneath Article 231 of the Constitution, the Commission has the mandate to advertise and maintain Ghana’s democracy, inculcating within the citizenry, the attention of their rights and obligations by way of civic training.
Speaking in an interview with the Ghanaian Times, its Chairparticular person, Ms Kathleen Addy, admitted that it’s in view of those threats that the NCCE as a part of its flagship programmes, launched this 12 months’s Constitution Week on the theme; “Together we can build Ghana, get involved.”
While searching for to advertise peace forward of a really essential elections that will once more check the muscle of Ghana’s democracy in only 5 months, Ms Addy mentioned the theme additionally serves as a clarion name on Ghanaians to contribute their quota towards the nation.
She mentioned though the explanations for folks wanting to depart the nation could also be legitimate, “Ghana is not a hopeless country. It is a country that finds itself in difficulty, which is the nature of building nations; you go through a rough patch but you keep going until you overcome it, and that is the attitude we must have as Ghanaians.”
“We have to realise that the countries where you are moving to, people worked hard to build those countries. Democracy requires a lot of work. Everybody has a role to play; leadership as well as citizenry but when we arrive at a point where everybody is not playing their role, then our democracy is threatened, our constitution is threatened,” she said.
The highway forward
As Ghana stands at this critical juncture, the necessity for collective motion has by no means been extra pressing. The NCCE’s Constitution Week theme, “Together we can build Ghana, get involved,” serves as a rallying cry for all Ghanaians to contribute to nation-building.
For political watchers, the mass exodus of Ghanaians notably the youth not solely depleted the nation’s energetic human useful resource wanted for transformational growth however bolstered political apathy; a state of affairs which may very well be detripsychological to Ghana’s democracy within the close to future.
The current political turbulence in Kenya serves as a stark reminder of what’s at stake. For Ghana to thrive, it should deal with the urgent problems with unemployment and ‘hopelessness’ affecting its youth. Only by reigniting a way of patriotism and hope can Ghana stem the tide of its brightest minds searching for greener pastures overseas.
As the nation approaches a vital election in 5 months, the alternatives made at this time will form the Ghana of tomorrow. The query stays: Will Ghana rise to the problem, or will it watch as its future walks out the door?
BY ABIGAIL ANNOH