Professor Aaron Mike Oquaye, a former Speaker of Ghana’s Parliament, has called on African leaders to take advantage of the continent’s abundant rich natural resources to develop it.
He said for a long time, matters relating to the various developmental issues facing Africa had virtually been accepted as the exclusive preserve of the executives in their various countries.
Prof. Oquaye made the call at the Second General Assembly of the Conference of Speakers and Presidents of African Legislatures (CoSPAL) in Accra.
CoSPAL is the first permanent platform that seeks to mobilise and unite Speakers and Presidents of legislatures across the continent to support the agenda for Africa’s growth and sustainable development.
One of the core tasks of the two-day Conference in Accra is to consider and adopt the Draft Constitution submitted by the Interim Technical Working Group (ITWG), which was assigned that responsibility at the first General Assembly held in Abuja, Nigeria in May 2022. Prof. Oquaye said postponement, adjournment, or whatever, was also just to continue with the perennial issue of Africa’s indebtedness.
“And as we come from the experience of that conference, we want to reexamine ourselves as to how we, as legislators, are going to take charge of some of the things that touch and concern Africa the most,” Prof. Oquaye said.
He said it was important that African countries faced the possible middle of the 21st century, to ask themselves, how do they make themselves able to manage their own economies? Declaring that “we can manage it by what we have.”
Citing Africa’s natural resources such as gold, diamond, bauxite, manganese, timber, cocoa and oil, Prof. Oquaye reiterated the need for their harmonisation for Africa’s development.
Mr Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, the Speaker of Ghana’s Parliament, rallied his fellow Speakers and Presidents of African Parliaments to step up efforts to combat poverty on the African continent.
“As Africans, we share a common destiny and face the common enemies of ignorance, poverty, and deprivation. Let us remember that no single country can address these challenges alone. We are politically, culturally and economically interconnected, and collective action is therefore necessary to overcome these challenges.”