Former Member of Parliament (MP) for Ablekuma South, Fritz Baffour, has supported the call by President Nana Akufo-Addo to Ghanaian workers to change their attitude to work.
Delivering his maiden May Day speech on Monday 1 May in Accra, President Akufo-Addo challenged workers in Ghana, especially those in the public and civil sector, to change their approach to work in order to ensure efficiency.
“I have said it at another forum, but I think it bears repeating: we arrive at work late and then spend the first hour in prayer; we are clock watchers and leave in the middle of critical work, because it is the official closing time. Everything comes to a stop when it rains and we seem to expect the rest of the world also to stop,” the President said.
He continued, “We have no respect for the hours set aside for work… We pray, we eat, we visit during working hours. We spend hours chatting on the telephone when customers are waiting to be served, thereby increasing our labour costs. We take a week off for every funeral. And then we wonder why we are not competitive.”
Commenting on the issue, Mr Baffour said he was taken aback at criticism of the President's speech in the media, following suggestions that he had maligned Ghanaian workers.
“I want to state categorically that I remain a steadfast and determined member of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), but what the president alluded to was absolutely to the point and that every well-meaning Ghanaian must accept that attitudinal change is non-negotiable if we are to transform our nation for the better,” he said.
“Indiscipline, selfishness, greed, irresponsibility, and disregard for our true mores and traditions are the order of the day,” he wrote, adding: “There is absolutely no social platform or gathering we do not complain, yet we remain stuck in the same groove of inaction and complacency and use political partisanship, name calling, heckling and self-denial as a sop to our perfidy.”
Mr Baffour said on Tuesday, May 2 that he had heard several complaints from expatriates and Ghanaians concerning the work ethics of some public sector workers, “so instead of taking issue with the President, let's put our differences aside and endeavour to work positively for our country and its great potential”.
Source: classfmonline.com
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leaders come late to functions. what do you think this is? let us stop blaming others for our problems. there are no appropriate targets or no targets at all. most ministers want others to hold their bags, ministers can not be challenge and equally comes late. minister use most part of their time for party issues. we must be spared of boring noises. i agree with His Excellency, we must all change our attitude to work. less corruption.
Another stomach selfish bbustard. When ndc was in power, it was the leadership but now it's our attitudes .looking for favours
Fritz, I like your objectivity. Keep it up and don't keep to the usual NDC/NPP mboasem!!
If we would get far with our quest for rapid development then ATTITUDINAL CHANGE is a must. In fact we need a CULTURAL REVOLUTION in Ghana.
ATTITUDINAL CHANGE IS A PROBLEM FOR YOU, ABOAGYE. IM SORRY FOR YOU!!! GHANAIANS ARE NOT ONLY LAZY AND MORE INTERESTED IN FREEBIES. THEY ARE CORRUPT AND INDISCIPLINED. IF WE DONT CHANGE OUR ATTITUDE TO EVEN HOW WE OBSERVE TRAFFIC REGULATIONS, POUR HARDENED CONCRETE ON ROADS AND DISRESPECT AUTHORITY NOTHING WILL CHANGE FOR GHANAIANS. NO SERIOUS BUSINESSMAN WILL INVEST IN A COUNTRY WHERE DRIVERS BLATANTLY DRIVE THROUGH RED LIGHTS WHEN THEY SHOULD STOP!!! WE HAVE GREEDY CONCRETE MANUFACTURERS WHOSE TRUCKS LEAVE CONCRETE RESIDUE ON OUR ROADS WHICH HAVE BEEN CONSTRUCTED WITH OUR HARD-EARNED FOREIGN CURRENCIES WITH IMPUNITY!!!!ABOAGYE ARE THE CONCRETE MANUFACTURERS NOT THE CRONIES OF JOHN MAHAMA?
Not quite on point for me. If he had also made a commitment in public to start the attitudinal change from the presidency he would have been on point for me.