The History Book

(Tina Sui) #1

306


GHANA YOUR


BELOVED COUNTRY


IS FREE FOREVER


NKRUMAH WINS GHANAIAN INDEPENDENCE (1957)


I


n February 1948, at a time
when the Gold Coast, a British
colony in West Africa, had
been demanding independence for
several years, a group of unarmed
African ex-servicemen marched to
the British governor with a petition
of grievances. Ordered to stop, they
refused, and the police opened fire.

In response to this, in 1949,
nationalist Kwame Nkrumah
formed the Convention People’s
Party (CPP), an organization
fighting for self-governance.
Nkrumah initiated a campaign
of positive action inspired by
Gandhi’s philosophy of non-violent
non-cooperation in India against

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Postcolonial Africa

BEFORE
1946 The formation of the
international Pan-African
Federation promotes
African independence.

1952–60 The Mau Mau
uprising in Kenya against
the British marks a turning
point in the struggle for
independence.

1956 A humiliating defeat for
France and Britain in Suez
signals a further decline of
the old European powers.

AFTER
1957–75 Most African nations
achieve independence from
French, British, Portuguese,
and Belgian rule.

1963 The Organization of
African Unity is founded.

1994 South Africans are the
last people on the continent
to achieve majority rule.

African
nationalism
gathers pace
during the
early 1900s.

The ideology of
Pan-Africanism
gains adherents
worldwide.

African
experiences in
World War II
spur demands for
racial equality.

Nkrumah fails in his campaign for the political unity of Africa.

By the mid-1970s, most of Africa has
gained independence, if not peace.

Nkrumah wins independence for Ghana.


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307


Kwame Nkrumah, Kojo Botsio,
Krobo Edusei, and other Ghanaian
politicians celebrate the independence
of their country, which was achieved
peacefully and democratically.

See also: The formation of the Royal African Company 176–79 ■ The Slave Trade Abolition Act 226–27 ■ The Berlin
Conference 258–59 ■ Indian independence and partition 298–301 ■ The release of Nelson Mandela 325

THE MODERN WORLD


the British. The strikes and protests
they encouraged remained peaceful
but paralyzed the country, and
Britain agreed to elections in early


  1. The CPP won 35 out of 38
    seats, and the Gold Coast moved
    rapidly toward independence,
    which was proclaimed on March 6,
    1957 with Nkrumah becoming
    prime minister of the nation of
    Ghana. It was a moment of huge
    hope for a new kind of Africa.
    The European powers that ruled
    Africa had been impoverished by
    World War II, and attitudes to
    colonialism were changing. Nations
    that had fought against fascism
    found it hard to justify imperialism.


A domino effect
Events in Ghana had a significant
impact in West Africa. In 1958,
Guinea voted to secede from France.
Determined not to be left behind,
Nigeria celebrated independence
from Britain on October 1, 1960.
By 1964, independence had also
been granted to Kenya, Northern
Rhodesia (Zambia), Nyasaland
(Malawi), and Uganda.

The French fought an eight-year
war to hold on to Algeria, finally
conceding independence in 1962.
The Portuguese, the first
European colonial power in Africa,
fought a long war to hold on to their
colonies of Angola, Mozambique,
and Guinea from 1961 to 1974. The
collapse of Belgian authority in
the Congo in 1960 led to a wave
of violence across the nation and
the assassination of the first prime
minister, Patrick Lumumba, in 1961.

Many African countries gained
independence during the Cold
War. Used as pawns between
the capitalist and communist
superpowers, they accepted loans
and military aid: in the 1970s,
Ethiopia was rewarded with billions
of dollars’ worth of Soviet military
equipment. Civil wars were also
numerous, such as the ethnic civil
wars in Rwanda and Zaire, as well
as the clashes between warlords
over food supplies in Somalia.

Dictatorial rulers
Once independence was achieved,
African nationalist leaders sought
to consolidate power by banning
political rivals. Coups and military
governments predominated—such
as that of Idi Amin in Uganda. By
the early 1970s, only Zimbabwe
and South Africa were still ruled by
the white political elite. Corruption,
however, existed in most African
countries. Nkrumah wanted Ghana
to be a beacon of success, but his
Pan-Africanism failed, and Ghana’s
fortunes began to slide as he
became increasingly dictatorial. ■

Kwame Nkrumah


Ambitious and well-educated,
Kwame Nkrumah had big plans
for both Ghana and Africa as a
whole. He went to college in the
US and later traveled to England,
where he became involved in the
West African Students’ Union. In
1948, he began traveling around
the Gold Coast as leader of a
youth movement calling for
“self-government now.”
Nkrumah’s calls for positive
action civil disobedience as head
of the Convention People’s Party
led to his arrest, and he was

sentenced to three years in
jail. While in prison, he won
the general election, and five
years later, in 1957, he became
prime minister of the newly
independent Ghana.
Nkrumah’s popularity rose
with the construction of new
schools, roads, and health
facilities, but by 1964 Ghana was
a one-party state and Nkrumah
its “life president.” After two
assassination attempts and
increasing human-rights abuses,
Nkrumah faced a coup in 1966
and went into exile in Guinea.
He died of cancer in 1972.

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