Kwabena Agyei Agyepong, a former General Secretary of the ruling New Patriotic Party has expressed displeasure over what he calls the 'continuous politics of insults' amongst most political parties and the media that is fast gaining acceptance in Ghana's political landscape.
He asked members of political parties and the media in Ghana to desist from the culture of insults because it was gradually ruining the culture of politics in Ghana.
He said the act only incited rage and dented the image of the country's budding peaceful nature.
Kwabena Agyei Agyepong was speaking in an interview, he said, "Our politicians must stay away from the politics of insults they engage in on various media platforms. Such acts can trigger violence and land us in an unpleasant state we never wished for."
"Let us do away with hateful speech and intolerance, that can cause rage and germinate into an uncontrollable situation and rather focus on building a peaceful Ghana we will all love to live in," he stated.
"We need to stop this trend now. It is a dent on the democracy which we pride ourselves in as the most peaceful on the continent. Our political parties must stick to issues and argue their points respectably."
"It is never true that politicians must be loud, aggressive and abusive. It is an unchecked trait that becomes a norm and it is possible to change it and run clean campaigns, "he added
He further reiterated that, these shameful practices, political actors continue to trade insults during every political campaign circle thus, denting the country's democratic principles.
He called on stakeholders to help regulate content on various media platforms, insisting that such content contributed to the increment in crime rate and other social vices.
Kwabena Agyei Agyepong called on the regulatory body to institute punitive measures for media outlets that failed to comply with acceptable standards.
He said the Media, the fourth estate of governance, must lift up their game to a more responsible role of educating, informing and fetching concerns from the citizenry and it cannot happen with half-baked individuals, engaged under very offensive conditions as story tellers or "voice they don't have, for the voiceless!".
He said the Media is a powerful tool for development and there is the need for all media houses to uphold that. Now, in Ghana, to be a successful politician is to read the archives and know in detail who said what, where and did what, when, spice it up with some semantics which when broken down amount to insults. It's about time we shifted from the practice of just reviewing papers to discussing issues that bother on the socio-economic development of our communities and promote peace for sustainable growth.
"The setting up of decency standards by all media houses, that seeks to check hosts/hostess and their panel members, is needed. Individuals and organizations must be sanctioned and if possible blacklisted from appearing on the sets anytime they flout the decency standards. The Media is the salvation of our ears and they must show the way, "Kwabena Agyei Agyepong said.
Credit: Richard Obeng Bediako