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Jantuah: The last of Nkrumah’s cabinetpdf print preview print preview
07/03/2011Page 1 of 1
 

Jantuah: The last of Nkrumah’s cabinet

By:      Ivor Agyeman-Duah

KWAME Sanaa-Poku Jantuah, in a previous name incarnation, John Ernest Jantuah, was an intriguing political player and diplomat. The youngest in Kwame Nkrumah’s First All African cabinet in 1954, he was, until his death in February 2011, at 89 years, the only survivor. His political life was both settled and unsettled; settled in the sense that he lived Nkrumaism to its full meaning. The unsettled part was that he also saw its disintegration in its internal ideological cleavages; with a future direction still unknown.

With the settled Nkrurnaisrn, he, together with his brother, F.A. Jantuah, had to swim against the political current of Asantes’ federalize agitation in the mid I 950s, with Nkrumah and the Convention Peoples’ Party (CPP) as per­ceived obstacles. Cocoa and its world demand and price had become some determinants of this agitation. The two helped to give the CPP some footing in a hostile environment.

The two (difficult to tell who was the alter ego to the other) were more than a multitude. The same in their ideological disposition; the same in their combative counter to anti-Nkrumaism. Controversial in some of their thoughts it was not surprising that when the elder passed on, it was mistaken as the drawing of the curtain on the younger.

Born in December 1 922, in Kumasi, to John Kwadwo Jantuáh and Madam Mary Yaa Difie of the royal Oyoko Clan in Mampongten, Jantual started primary school at St Peter’s Catholic. School and continued at St ‘Teresa’s Minor Sem­inary at Asiasano in the Central Region. The intention was to be a catholic priest but he has this argumentative spirit and so he changed his mind and went to St Augustine’s College.

But strangely, it was while at the Seminary that he fell in love with the Marxist Philosophy of Socialism. He had read seriously and had come to the conclusion ‘that “Rerum Novarum,” the Catholic Church’s remedial reaction to Socialism, was, in fact, not convincing in solving the socio-economic problems of the masses. H had also read and studied Islam, ‘including the Life of the Prophet Mohammed, and was only short of becoming a Muslim. And he was only 14.

 

On an Asanteman Council scholarship, set up by the late King of Asante, Otumfuo Sir Osei Agyeman Prempeh II, Jantuah studied Politics and Economics from 1946-48 at Plater ColIege Oxford University. He later indulged in Law at the Gibson ‘and Weldon School of Law in London and obtained the degrees of LLB and BL He was called to the Bar at Lincoln’s Inn and later the Ghana Bar.

 Meeting Nkrumah

Jantuah met Nkrumah for the first time in London in 1948 when he was completing his studies at Oxford and Nkrumah had come to Bri­tain from the United States with the intention to do his doctorate at the London School of Eco­nomics and Political Science. He invited Jantuah to the house of George Padmore in Mornington Crescent. Nkrumah took to him not only because he understood the complex international affairs of the time but because he was as a member of the West African Students Union, anti-colonial by orientation, best of all, a member of the Oxford Labour Club (Socialist). But unknown to Jantuah, the British were even at that time moni­toring Nkrumah’s movements and so he would later be interrogated for visiting that house. On his return to Ghana, he was persuaded by Nkrumah and so they both joined the United Gold Coast Convention.

By 1949, Jantuah had been made its Secretary in Asante, breaking away to join the CPP, again on Nkrumah’s advice.

Notwithstanding the conflict and tensed situation between Asante nationalism and the transi­tion into statehood that was upon the time, Jantu­ah managed to navigate to an equilibrium of sense and sensibility — the socialist in him should have naturally made him kick against monarchical power in which he had been born into but it did not; he served time as editor of the Asante Sentinel, President of the Asante Youth Association (closely linked to Asante’s royalty) before assuming national and international engagements when the CPP was firmly in charge. He was elected CPP member of the Gold Coast Legislative Council in 195 1 and appointed Ministerial Secretary (now Deputy Minister) to the Minister of Justice and Attorney-General. Between 1954-56, on his re-election to the Legislative Assembly, Jantuah was appointed Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries of the First All-African Cabinet when Nkrumah became the Prime Minister.

In what had started as a ministerial career, Nkrumah, ever trusting of his younger colleague, decided in 1956 to appoint him to London as Deputy High Commissioner. He became the High Commissioner in 1959 at age 37. And then he was made the Ambassador to France — among other duties as a member of Ghana’s Delegation to the United Nations General Assembly, and served on its Special Political Committee as well as on the Economic and Social Committee.

Between 1962 — 64, he became Ghana’s Ambassador to Brazil and was part of the dele­gation to the Casablanca Conference of Heads of African States, in Morocco. He represented Nkrumah on a number of official occasions, including the Memorial Service of the late Mr. Dag Hammarskjold, former Secretary General of the UN; the presidential inauguration of the Pres­ident of Argentina in Buenos Aires and the leader of the special delegation to the UN Security Council on “The Question of Southern Rhodesia.”

Such was Nkrumah’s trust in Jantuah that the latter would choose which posting to accept. Nkrumah wanted him as High Commissioner in London or to be the Ambassador to Liberia hut he showed reluctance. A personal letter Nkrumah wrote to him on May 13. 1957, said in part: “l need not emphasize the importance of this assignment at this interesting stage of Ghana’s history and I have full confidence in your ability to represent the interests of the Government and the people of Ghana in a manner that will be a credit to you and to the country.”

Again in 1959, Nkrumah authorized the quin­tessential intellectual civil servant, Michael Dei Anang, to write to him on October 22 to persuade him to go to Moscow since Ghana needed some-one with the “energy, dynamism and intellectual alertness which you possess in such rich mea­sure.” Dei — Anang’s letter showed the extent to which Nkrumah’s foreign policy was global and conscious of the Cold War dynamics and the role of Moscow in that. “This has resulted in our maintaining an inadequate view of the aims and objectives of a substantial portion of the world! To eradicate this limitation, it is necessary to have a representative with your wide and mature approach to problems. This is the only reason why your name was mentioned in connection with the Moscow posting by Prime Minister Nkrumah himself. If you feel in spite of all this, that you would rather remain in Paris, we will let the matter end there.”

Jantuah did remain in Paris. For his perspec­tives to issues had been rewarding, especially between 1964-66. He succeeded in moderating Nkrumah’s acrimonious stand against President de Gaulle’s handling of the Algerian colonial struggle and again persuaded Nkrumah that instead of a cabinet decision to withdraw Ghana from the membership of the Commonwealth, it should rather sever diplomatic relations with the United Kingdom over the “Rhodesian Problem.” But such was also the, confidence his boss had developed in him for speaking his mind plainly that in 1965, with a year to his overthrow, Nkrumah requested Jantuah to be a signatory — as Witness to His Last Will and Testament, the signing of which took place on the occasion of the Commonwealth Conference in London.

Jantuah got back to Ghana in 1967, after the February 1966 coup and got detained briefly at the Terna Harbour. Some of his luggage were confiscated and guess what these were: Several books on and by Nkrumah, “Mein Kamp" by Adolf Hitler and other socialist stuff.

Others lives

He set up his City Chambers in Accra from I967-90 and in between engaged in politics. He helped revive the CPP. Between 1971-73, he was President. Socialist Society of Kwame Nkrumah, Founder and chair, in 1971, of the Ghana Peo­ple’s Party, in 1978, Member, Peoples Movement for Freedom and Justice which fought the mili­tary dictatorship of Acheampong.

In 1979, when the CPP came back to power under the Peoples National Party, he was appointed the Minister of Local Government, Rural Development and Co-operatives and also became Minister of the interior until the coup of Rawlings on December 31 1981. Forced into exile in 1981, partly because lie had hinted of a possible coup against Limann, which was ignored, he could only return on the assurance of Captain Kojo Tsikata, an Nkrumaist and a socialist with whom he had shared a common ideology and who was obviously upset that his friend was having a bad time in exile.

Shortly after his return, Jantuah was appointed a member of Ghana’s delegation to the funer­al of Sekou Toure, President of the Republic of Guinea and Nkrumah’s political ally.

It was not long afterwards that he was appointed by Jerry John Rawlings, obviously on the advice of Tsikata, as Ghana’s Ambassador and the last one to the German Democratic Republic from I 985-90. He saw the fall of the Berlin Wall and his public career and service with it.

In 198 1, he was awarded the Grand-Officer d'Ordue du Merite by the President of Senegal, Abdou Diouf. In 1999, the Pan-Africanist Forum honoured him for his “outstanding role as pio­rieer of the independence struggle of Ghana” and in 2007, a Member of the Order of the Volta was bestowed on him by former President John Kufuor.

Jantuah spent his remaining years in peaceful retirement. He carried on with his intellectual pursuits and was a major contributor to an anthology of political essays that I edited in 1991, “Political Reflections on the Motherland,” 216 page book with contributions from some of the pillars of the political reforms at the time, including the late President Hilla Limann, Prof. Emeritus Albert Adu Boahen, the former Bishop of the Methodist Conference, The Rt Dr Samuel Asanti-Antwi, and the late editor of The Pioneer newspaper in Kumasi, T. H. Ewusi-Brookman. As a nephew, I also spent some time with him, working on his memoirs which will hopefully be published this year.

 

*Source:

               Daily Graphic          Page: 10         Monday, March 7, 2011

 
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