All that glitters in Obuasi is not gold
Kofi Yeboah Writes,
It is Good Friday, April 7, 2023.
Jesus Christ has been killed by the Jews
after one of his disciples, Judas Iscariot, sold him out for crucifixion 2023
years ago, so says the Bible.
Christians across the world are mourning
Jesus Christ, some with church services and others with ‘Gbonyo Party’.
I am doing none of those.
I am travelling to Obuasi.
But I am soberly reflecting on the saving
grace of Jesus Christ secured by his death on this day.
One nagging question, which has never
betrayed me on this occasion like Judas did to Jesus, but which I desire to
kill like the Jews did to Jesus, is that if the death of Jesus Christ brought
salvation to humankind, did Judas, who contributed significantly to the killing
of Jesus, do wrong?
Another nagging question: why did Judas
Iscariot commit suicide after gaining handsomely from the betrayal transaction?
To the latter question, I guess the answer
may not be far-fetched: money is not everything in life.
Anyway, let me mind my own business and
leave Judas to mind his.
Metro
Mass: ‘Moving the Nation’
I am traveling to Obuasi by public
transport.
My choice would have been a VIP or STC Intercity
bus, going through Kumasi to Obuasi.
But I am at the Metro Mass Bus Terminal at
Kaneshie.
I had sworn never to patronize that bus
again because the few times I did under unavoidable circumstances, I suffered
serious bodily harm.
But someone has convinced me: Metro Mass
now has ‘VIP’ type of buses, with air-condition ‘full nyanya’ and better seats
than the plastic ones I know.
With the belief I have in my source, I
breach my resolve against Metro Mass and opt for it.
“After all, Jesus Christ suffered serious
bodily harm on Good Frida for my salvation so it is not a big deal to suffer
same on Good Friday,” I muttered.
From the outlook, the bus, indeed, looks
like a ‘VIP’ bus but I am still thinking about that local adage: “No matter how
madness may flee from a man, he will still retain a little madness to scare
children”.
After buying the ticket, I head to the
front door to board the third bus for the day.
A gentleman is sitting at the door and he tells
another passenger ahead of me we should use the back door.
Why?
He is conversing with the driver.
“Lalai! If Jesus does not come today and waits
till Sunday, hell will break loose here,” I whispered.
It dawns on me immediately that there is a
little madness left in this mad man called Metro Mass Bus to scare children.
But we are not children to pay attention
to this mad man, as we insist on using the front door.
I have boarded the bus and immediately I
am greeted with another spectacle of ‘madness’: the bus has middle seats, apart
from the two seats on the right and left sides.
I am trying to hold the folded middle seat
affixed to mine while sitting down and it trips, almost falling off.
Listen. I am hearing other passengers
shouting about similar state of the middle seats near them.
I am getting frustrated and asking myself:
“When will this bus get full? “How will passengers move freely with these
middle seats?”
I see the driver getting up from his seat;
he is wearing a yellow T-Shirt with black inscription at the back: “Moving The
Nation”.
Moving the nation? In which direction? To
where? With what vehicle? At what bodily cost?
Obviously, that talk is more rhetoric than
reality.
The defects
Passengers are required to pay Ghs5 for
their luggage but no tag is issued for luggage packed in the boot of the bus.
This is likely to result in loss of
luggage, delay at bus stops for identification of luggage and even quarrels
needlessly.
Inside the bus, it is clear the middle
seats have fallen apart and the centre is not capable of holding them.
I am sitting in the bus for two hours as
passengers get on board one-by-one and the discomfort of my seat (not a middle
seat) – hard and tough – hurts my buttocks badly.
After almost three hours of loading, the
bus begins the journey to Obuasi at exactly 10:22am.
I heave a sigh of relief and lift my head
to watch the clock on the bus as I always do when traveling.
It reads: ’22:22’; that in Greenwich Mean
Time (GMT) is evening.
I can now appreciate the direction Metro
Mass is “Moving The Nation” – backward!
I cut some slice of comfort from the
air-condition in the bus that seems to offer reparation for the huge
disappointment I feel.
Sleep tip-toes in to steal my eyes, sending
me into a trance.
Suddenly, there is a loud, rude awakening.
As the bus runs into potholes, I feel the
crunch of the weak shock absorbers, while the windows let out a loud, clattering
cry begging for mercy, all in a manner that keep flipping my head left, right,
forward and backward, whilst the upper part of my body suffers serious tremor.
That was a constant handout to me on the
seven-hour journey from Accra to Obuasi.
Bra
Gordon in the mix
In the absence of middle seats, a gentleman
who identifies himself as Bra Gordon is occupying the aisle, pacing up and down,
and raving and ranting.
Bra Gordon is a drug peddler who has turned
the bus into a healthcare facility and the passengers into ‘patients’ to
administer his medication.
He is standing right in front of me; as
soon as he starts business, I get my mouth and nose strongly girded with a mask
to avoid ‘salivafall’ on me that may require me to seek medication from him.
The diagnosis Bra Gordon is subjecting his
‘patients’ to in this healthcare facility is stories about how the medicine he
peddles healed people suffering from all kinds of diseases.
According to him, his medicine can aid
menstrual flow, cure numbness, ease pain at the lower part of the buttocks and
cure a person suffering stroke at the early stages.
Spicing his message with a good dose of
‘fear and aggressive marketing’, Bra Gordon succeeds in getting a good number
of the ‘patients’ to buy the medicine at a cost of Ghs100 per full pack or Ghs
20 in smaller packs.
A medical practitioner traveling on the
same bus later tells me the medicine Bra Gordon is peddling is Piroxicam
capsules used to reduce pain, swelling and joint stiffness from arthiritis.
Interestingly, one week after meeting Bra
Gordon on the Metro Mass bus, I get to buy a small pack of Piroxicam capsules for
just Ghs2, far less than the price (Ghs20) at which he sells his drugs.
Indeed, Bra Gordon is doing brisk business
with his health risk business.The dosage for this medication is based on
one’s medical condition but the dosage prescribed by Bra Gordon is
‘one-size-fits-all’, without specificity of one’s condition.
The bigger picture is that when the
medicine has not been prescribed by a competent medical practitioner and it is
wantonly peddled and used, such as done by Bra Gordon and his patients, it can
be grossly abused with dire health consequences.
Selling
on moving vehicles
The law frowns
on selling on moving vehicles.
Regulation
116 of the Road Traffic Regulations, 2012 provides that “A person shall not cause or permit to be caused nuisance, including
preaching and hawking, on a public or commercial vehicle while the motor
vehicle is in motion.”
I don’t understand
why the Metro Mass driver allows Bra Gordon to peddle medicine on the bus from
Accra to Kasoa.
Metro Mass is
really moving the nation to everywhere but the right direction.
Africana
Lodge
At 5:35pm, the Metro Mass bus arrives in
Obuasi, the land of gold.
But I will soon realise that all that
glitters in Obuasi is not gold!
I have checked into the Africana Lodge,
situated in a serene environment and looking good, for bed and breakfast.
I jump behind my laptop to get a few
pressing issues sorted out before bedtime.
Suddenly, the air-conditioner in the room
goes off, although the lights are on.
What’s happening?
A dash out of the room and a gentleman is
walking away from the area.
“Massa, why is the AC off?”, the obvious
question drops.
“We have a problem with our generator. The
lights will come back at 11[pm],” he responds.
That response sounds awkward.
But the response for asking why there is
no prior notice before switching off the air-condition is more pathetic.
“Don’t you have fun in your room?”
Hmmm!
I am tired after the seven-hour journey
and there is little energy left in me to ‘fight’ this kind of battle so I
retire to bed straightaway.
It is daybreak the next morning.
I walk to the restaurant at 7:55am for
breakfast.
A lady tells me breakfast has been served
already and that the person who serves breakfast has gone to the market.
It is as though I’m watching a movie.
But this movie has to stop rolling sooner than
later, I promise myself.
“Okay. I am waiting. Whenever she comes,
ask her to serve me breakfast,” I tell the lade before leaving.
An hour and half later, the breakfast
arrives in my room but I will spare the devil that lies in the detail.
At 11:25am, I reach out for the television
remote control to watch the EPL match between Manchester United and Everton.
The remote control is broken and loosely
patched; the battery cover is not there and the switch on/off button has sunk
into the device.
In the room, the buttons covering
electrical cables have peeled off in a messy spectacle.
In the fridge, there is half-bottled water
lying quietly.
Obviously, there is lack of maintenance
and cleanliness at this facility.
Time to check out after two nights: the
receptionist checks the details from a compute and begins to walk away without
issuing a receipt.
“Can I get receipt, please,” a request is
promptly made.
She issues one; not a VAT receipt though.
I think I have had enough and I need to
get out of the place as quickly as possible.
I walk away with one impression: all that
glitters in Obuasi is not gold.
I think the Ghana Tourism Authority (GTA) must crack the whip and ensure that hospitality facilities in Obuasi that glitter are actually gold!
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