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Escape from Ghana - Occasional Kwatriot Kwesi Yankah writes
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Escape from Ghana - Occasional Kwatriot Kwesi Yankah writes

The past week found me shivering in the freezing temperatures of Scotland; far above the cold on Kwahu mountains which is sometimes blamed for rapid population growth.

Aberdeen cold was higher, and hit so hard you were compelled to frequently touch your ears to ensure they have not been nibbled by rodents. ‘Hello my ears, are you still there,’ I asked myself in Aberdeen. 

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But putting Ghana behind you in November 2024 may be for good reasons. The dreaded voting was three weeks away, and you may have joined large droves of Ogyakromians heading towards London with one-way tickets.

With rising election heat at home, what about a freezing cold experience elsewhere? It was not surprising the Accra to London Flight BA 078  was jammed that Saturday night with no empty seats, not even for lizards.

Rather than steal glances at mammoth crowds in Kumbungu on social media, why not distance Ghana and tell your doctor your blood pressure returned to normal as soon as the flight touched down at Heathrow?

Besides intimidating crowds pulled by  rival parties, the worst offenders are the so-called pollsters, who wake up hallucinating on lotto numbers, but compel an entire Ashanti region to sleep on empty stomachs, only because they saw on TV the face of Global Analytics? How a single face on TV, can induce curfew in Ashanti is yet be to be explained.

But my visit to Aberdeen had nothing to do with Global Analytics whose critics hope the dreadful pollster does not apply for the position of Electoral Commissioner before December 7. 

The University of Aberdeen having heard of noises made by Yours Truly, invited me to appear on the annual distinguished speaker platform of Elphinstone  Institute, to commemorate through a lecture the work of a great ballad scholar, David Buchan who established the Institute.

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With my interest in language, rhetoric and ethnography of communication, I decided on a theme I had quietly investigated since the HIV/AIDS outbreak of mid 1980s, followed recently by COVID-19.

The lecture attracted a wide variety of scholars from communication, folklore, language  and the medical sciences. It was also streamed live on Zoom and Youtube.

But my one-week flash also enabled me to dialog with graduate students and faculty of the Elphinstone Institute, and meet the Principal of the University to explore future collaboration with Ghanaian universities.

I ended this all with a meeting with Ghanaian students of University of Aberdeen on issues about their progress, welfare, and life after graduation. How else can I extend appreciation to the Elphinstone Institute for a great honor and warm hospitality.

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Let me mention Nick Le Bigre, Frances Wilkins, Allison Sharman of the Institute, but also my Ghanaian pal Michael Okyere who gave me all support needed.

What a temporary escape from December 7! 

My return Flight from Heathrow to Accra was similarly jammed. From various whispers and color codes encountered, I realized passengers had mostly arrived to cast their votes early morning, 7th December. 

They would then return to Europe with the next available Flight, only to be surprised that December 7th has been the most peaceful in Ghana’s electoral history.  

kyankah@ashesi.edu.gh 

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