Duffuor’s Intervention Uplifted MUSIGA – Obuor
MUSIGA President Bice Osei Kuffour popularly known as Obuor has singled out former Finance Minister Dr. Kwabena Duffuor for praise for his major intervention that turned things around for the Music union in 2013.
According to the ‘konkontiba’ hit maker, the finance guru was patient with him and his other colleagues after they managed to book an appointment with him over their proposal for the economy.
“Creative arts is the backbone of politics and so if government does not support us, we will miss it. In 2012 when I became the president of MUSIGA, together with my team, we were bent on getting government to look at the creative arts industry. So we met with the then trade minister Hanna Tetteh. We had two meetings with her, we told her to try the creative arts industry because this industry employs so many people.
“After explaining the chain and our plan, she kind of had it but said she doesn’t see how government was going to commit funds to it. We moved from her to the ministry of chieftaincy and culture, we met with the minister. He also didn’t get it so we said we will go to the finance minister and it took us three months to get an appointment with Honorable Kwabena Duffuor. We went to him, it was me, Samini, D-Black and a few others and we told him we had a vision and wanted him to take his time and listen to us. And our vision was to make music one of the key growth pillars for Ghana and we wanted him to understand us, and so he listened to us,” Obour told Bola Ray on Starr Chat Wednesday.
He continued: “After we shared the chain of jobs that can be created by just one song, he said ‘wow’ can you put a proposal together for me, and we said the proposal is ready and so we dropped it and left. And then a month later, we went back and noticed that he had put a team together and he made us meet the director of budget and we explained further our proposal. Lo and behold, in the budget reading of 2011 to 2012, he had captured the creative arts, specifically the music industry, in the budget and he gave us GHC2 million to do three things that were going to boost the music industry and that was a major upliftment for the industry”.
He however disclosed that some people in the creative arts industry who were pained by the budgetary allocation later went back to the ministry questioning why the money had been given to the music industry, but the money was given to MUSIGA regardless.
Source: StarrFMonline
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