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Stop complaining – Minister tells diaspora community

The Deputy Minister of Trade, Robert Ahomka-Lindsay said the diaspora community must not always insist on seeing a minister or top government official before engaging in any meaningful business in Ghana.

The Deputy Minister of Trade, Robert Ahomka-Lindsay

This is according to the Deputy Trade Minister Robert Ahomka-Lindsay.

The Deputy Minister was speaking at an event organised by the diaspora community held at the Accra International Conference Centre.

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He said the diaspora community must not always insist on seeing a minister or top government official before engaging in any meaningful business in Ghana.

“Nobody likes whiners, people that spend all the time whining really get on people’s nerves. So stop whining; stop saying this doesn’t work, that doesn’t work; please, we know it doesn’t work so stop whining all the time saying it doesn’t work. If it worked, you probably won’t be sitting there.”

“It is not always that when you have to make a decision you have to see the minister, the deputy or every head; what is this thing, where did it come from?  Do you know how many people actually sit down and want to see the minister every day; hundreds of them,” he added.

After the minister had spoken, a member of the returnees, yet to be named, responded to the remarks in a similar fashion and tone.

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“We came here to sit with the decision makers to help us formulate policies that will integrate us into the system, where are the decision makers, where are they, they are nowhere around here to listen to us."

“ So now everything we talk about here is going to be second and third class, it is going to be washed down and whatever is left is going to be passed on to the decision makers. Everybody that comes in here has the attitude that ‘I have got something better to do’. If you are a business person and you know that there is a constituency that has the biggest amount of money, the most amount of expertise that you need into your business to make it work, I would have thought that you would spend more time with that constituency in order for them to do something. And this attitude and arrogance that we are whiners; really? Who travels 3000 miles to be a whiner, we could have been whiners from our constituency, we didn’t have to come here to whine. So this attitude has got to change.”

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