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Ghana marks leader's centenary | Ghana marks leader's centenary |
(about 7 hours later) | |
Ghana is marking 100 years since the birth of Kwame Nkrumah, the country's first president and a founding father of Africa's independence movement. | Ghana is marking 100 years since the birth of Kwame Nkrumah, the country's first president and a founding father of Africa's independence movement. |
The governing National Democratic Congress designated the day a national holiday and organised celebrations. | The governing National Democratic Congress designated the day a national holiday and organised celebrations. |
Hundreds of Ghanaians gathered in the capital, Accra, for a vigil. | Hundreds of Ghanaians gathered in the capital, Accra, for a vigil. |
Nkrumah led Ghana to independence from the British in 1957 and served as president afterwards. He was eventually overthrown in a coup in 1966. | Nkrumah led Ghana to independence from the British in 1957 and served as president afterwards. He was eventually overthrown in a coup in 1966. |
President John Atta Mills called for the nation to show "collective pride" on what he has labelled Founder's Day. | President John Atta Mills called for the nation to show "collective pride" on what he has labelled Founder's Day. |
He described Nkrumah as the man who "lit the flame that blazed a liberation struggle of the African continent". | He described Nkrumah as the man who "lit the flame that blazed a liberation struggle of the African continent". |
Radio and TV have been filled with sights and sounds from Ghana's independence struggle in the run-up to Founder's Day. | Radio and TV have been filled with sights and sounds from Ghana's independence struggle in the run-up to Founder's Day. |
Nkrumah was a champion of black pride | |
Ghanaians are celebrating with concerts, processions and ceremonial gatherings. | Ghanaians are celebrating with concerts, processions and ceremonial gatherings. |
The BBC's David Amanor, in Accra, says the decision to dedicate a national holiday to the former leader has raised controversy. | The BBC's David Amanor, in Accra, says the decision to dedicate a national holiday to the former leader has raised controversy. |
Our correspondent says many Ghanaians have mixed feelings about Nkrumah. | Our correspondent says many Ghanaians have mixed feelings about Nkrumah. |
By the time he was overthrown, he was an isolated and authoritarian leader presiding over a flagging economy and a population disillusioned with him. | |
The theories of Nkrumah have become popular again in his home country | |
He had outlawed trade union strikes, indoctrinated the youth and concentrated more on foreign affairs than domestic concerns. | |
After a bomb was placed in a bouquet of flowers in a botched assassination attempt, he introduced a the Preventive Detention Act, allowing him to jail his opponents at will. | |
The military eventually overthrew him while he was on a foreign trip. | |
But our correspondent says many of his ideas have made a comeback in recent years. | |
Many Ghanaians now remember him as a champion of education, industrialisation and black pride. |
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