The daughter of Ghana’s first President says her father’s vision to see a united Africa is relevant today as it was some six decades ago.
“’Africa must unite.’ Not ought to, not should; a must. Africa must unite,” said Samia Nkrumah in reference to three words that describe her father.
Samia was speaking Friday on the Super Morning Show on Joy FM as Ghana celebrates Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Day, also known as Founder’s Day, a national holiday that celebrates the birthday of the late leader.
“For me what this [Nkrumah Memorial Day] brings to mind — and I have said it repeatedly — is that Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah is my Leader. I am a student of Kwame Nkrumah. I read him, I study him and I will urge every Ghanaian, every African to read Nkrumah’s own words to examine his writings, the development plans that were implemented or started under his leadership.
“A united states of Africa, one nation, 1.5 billion people who can negotiate the best deals for themselves to raise the living standards of our people. If we study, we can adapt his policies and ideas to today’s challenges and changing circumstances,” she said.
Kwame Nkrumah
Dr Nkrumah was a leading figure in the short-lived Casablanca Group of African leaders, which sought to achieve pan-African unity and harmony through deep political, economic, and military integration of the continent in the early 1960s prior to the establishment of the Organisation of African Unity, now African Union.
Nkrumah was instrumental in the creation of the OAU in Addis Ababa in 1963.
Kwame Nkrumah was Ghana’s first Prime Minister and President, having led the country to independence from British colonial rule in 1957.
Kwame Nkrumah is hailed in Ghana and world over as an influential advocate of Pan-Africanism.
He was overthrown in coup d’etat in 1966 and died in 1972 in exile.
If Nkrumah were alive today
Samia Nkrumah said on Friday that if Dr Nkrumah was alive today, the message he will give to Ghanaians will be the message he always gave.
“The mission of this generation is for us to unite. We have to complete our independence. Africa cannot remain down, down-trodden, marginalized and exploited. It is not fair and it is not right and every dignified African must be part of the struggle or the revolution to liberate us fully,” she said.