Dr. Yaw Osei Adutum – Adomonline.com https://www.adomonline.com Your comprehensive news portal Mon, 27 Apr 2026 19:10:18 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://www.adomonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/cropped-Adomonline140-32x32.png Dr. Yaw Osei Adutum – Adomonline.com https://www.adomonline.com 32 32 “We should have had counselling” – Adutwum on student life during Ghana’s coup era https://www.adomonline.com/we-should-have-had-counselling-adutwum-on-student-life-during-ghanas-coup-era/ Mon, 27 Apr 2026 19:10:16 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2656209 Former Minister of Education and Member of Parliament for Bosomtwe, Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum, has reflected on his student days at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), describing them as years shaped by political instability, fear, and repeated military takeovers in Ghana.

Speaking on The Career Trail on Joy Learning TV and Joy News, he explained that his generation grew up during a period when coups and military rule defined national life, leaving lasting emotional and psychological effects on young people.

“Born in 1964, by 1966 the first coup had happened and Nkrumah was overthrown. Then Busia came in 1969, and he was overthrown in 1972 by I. K. Acheampong. Acheampong stayed in power until 1978,” he recounted.

“In 1978 there was a palace coup, then a brief transition, and then Rawlings came. Boom, another coup. Then we thought democracy had finally returned under Hilla Limann in 1979. But on December 31, 1981, there was another coup by Jerry John Rawlings,” he continued.

He said growing up under military rule meant living with curfews and constant fear.

“I lived all my life under military dictatorship. There were curfews where by 6 p.m. you had to be indoors. If you went out, you did so at your own risk. You could be beaten, arrested, or even killed,” he shared.

He also recalled a famous public exchange that captured the political climate of the time.

“Remember somebody asking Jerry John Rawlings, ‘When are you handing over?’ And he famously said, ‘Hand over to whom?’ It was a big newspaper banner headline,” he noted.

According to him, the political instability was not just history in books, but a lived reality that shaped how young people understood life and the future.

“For us growing up, these were not just headlines. They were our reality,” he said.

One incident that particularly stayed with him was the execution of General Afrifa, which heightened fear among young students at the time.

“The youth were in shock. We were in school when we got the news that General Afrifa had been executed. The fear, the anguish, the trauma among children was real,” he recalled.

“Now I look back and say they probably should have given us counselling. We were going through a traumatic time as the youth of this country,” he added.

By the time he reached KNUST, Dr Adutwum said student life had become deeply entangled with national politics and opposition to military rule.

“At KNUST, beyond studying, everything was about politics. The preoccupation of students was how to get Rawlings out of power. The adults could not raise their voices for fear of being captured or killed. It was the students who stood up,” he stated.

Memory full


This climate, he said, led to frequent demonstrations that often disrupted academic work and, at times, forced universities to close temporarily.

“There were demonstrations upon demonstrations. I was the Student Assistant Secretary of the Student Representative Council of KNUST, and I was part of the movement calling for change. Sometimes we sneaked our way to Kejetia and gathered there before moving onto the streets chanting for change. We were tired of military dictatorship,” he reiterated.

Despite the tension and uncertainty, he said those experiences shaped his understanding of leadership and resilience, although he now believes the emotional strain of the period should have been addressed with counselling and psychological support.

]]>
Dr. Adutwum challenges NDC over reinstatement of PTAs [Listen] https://www.adomonline.com/dr-adutwum-challenges-ndc-over-reinstatement-of-ptas-listen/ Fri, 25 Jul 2025 11:22:08 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2559799 Former Education Minister Dr. Yaw Osei Adutwum has pushed back against the Mahama-led government’s claim of reinstating Parent-Teacher Associations (PTAs) in public schools, insisting that the NPP never scrapped them.

Speaking on Adom FM’s Dwaso Nsem, Dr. Adutwum clarified that PTAs have remained functional, with many schools continuing to collaborate with parents on matters of student welfare, discipline, and school development.

His comments follow a July 17, 2025 announcement by the Ghana Education Service (GES) on the “reintroduction” of PTAs, based on a directive from President John Mahama. According to the GES, the decision was aimed at deepening collaboration between parents, teachers, and the wider school community to enhance the quality of education.

But Dr. Adutwum said the claim of reinstatement is misleading. He explained that what was suspended under the previous administration was the enforcement of PTA levies that often resulted in students being barred from examinations due to unpaid dues.

“What we did was to regulate certain charges that were being used to extort money from parents under the guise of PTA levies. The PTA structure itself was not banned,” he explained.

He further noted that the body was simply renamed a Parents Association (PA), as teachers were no longer officially part of the arrangement.

Dr. Adutwum called on the Mahama-led administration to be honest in its communication on education reforms, urging the government not to create the impression that PTAs had been scrapped under the NPP.

Some schools, he said, have continued PTA activities uninterrupted, including meetings and collaborative initiatives.

Listen to Dr. Adutwum in the audio attached above:

Gertrude Otchere 

ALSO READ:

 

 

 

]]>