It was August 25, 2014. He had been assigned from the head office of the Foreign Affairs Ministry in Accra.
"The
way I saw the passport office, I said, there was no way I was going to
work in that environment," he quickly processed his shock.
Zoo-like at its busiest, refugee camp at its slowest. Angry queues, insulted staff and screaming security officers.
Moving
in and out of the building, trying to unofficially bridge the gap of
frustration were middle-men who could get you a passport in exchange for
an arm and a leg.
Nothing kills the patriotism of a
travelling Ghanaian than an application for a passport - arguably. The
internet remains a reliable witness documenting in articles, the
frustrations, the red-hot anger.
All because of a simple booklet to record dates and destinations.
Ghana
has broken down, an angry opinion read. And if you listen to the reason
for the frustrations as explained by the Director of Passport, this
angry man would feel vindicated.
The two old, tired printers had broken down, he said.
"The printers were some desktop printers that were breaking down every now and then," he said.
"The
two printers were not the type that you could load and sit back and get
it printed. They were the ones that you have to slot a paper in one
after the other
So 26,000 ready-to-print passports sat on laptops as their owners sat on tenterhooks.
Mr
Ntrakwa explained on the Super Morning Show Wednesday how he got to
work at a national pain in the neck - the passport office.
He said the first target was to clear off the backlog and the front log of huge human presence at the office.
He
said he got two industrial printers from Germany to clear more than
26,000 backlog and after relentless work the office had cleared this by
December.
The German machines perhaps shocked at the Ghanaian pressure, broke down after crossing the finishing line.
The
backlog returned with a vengeance exceeding 26,000 after about four
weeks. It took four months to install a fitter, pressure-tested system
of printing passports.
"It has the capacity of printing about 1000 or more passports a day. Within 15 minutes it prints 30 books, he explained.
With
a new printing technology in place, a relieved Director turned his
attention to the human presence at the Passport Office in Accra.
"We
realised that the situation could be improved if we prevented everybody
from coming to the passport office because...in other advanced
countries, you don't see people at the passport office. It is a security
zone".
Replacing a machine is easy if you have the money.
Sacking a crowd is reserved for those who have guts. The Director of
Passports explained why this step was necessary.
"...the
reason was that on a daily basis with the sort of pressure that they put
on officers, we end up attending to them and in the process leave all
the applications that had come to the office.
"... and so from
morning to evening you are attending to people. By the close of work
they are gone and then the others who couldn't come to the office have
their cases sitting in the system with nobody to work on them"
He sacked everybody including an industry of middle-men who had made a healthy profit on an unhealthy public service.
"We
had to clear all of them from the passport office. Everybody who was
not on our list as a staff was banned from the passport office" he said.
Mr.
Alexander Ntrakwa who had by now demonstrated a stiff spine for
discipline suggested even more radical changes were in store, had he not
been prevailed upon.
"If I had been given the opportunity to do certain things, it would have been more drastic than we did".
He
said he had wanted to prohibit staff who work in certain offices from
entering the office with their mobile phones through which they could
receive information from some middle-men who wanted a quick job for some
quick cash.
The Director in his baritone voice
said the office instituted a customer service center to close the
communication gap between the office and clients.
"We gave out
the numbers and we said that if you had any challenge call those
numbers...even if your passport is ready the person will be able to tell
you and direct you..so don't come there at all"
"That has
helped a lot", he breathed a sigh of relief as his professional allergy
to human crowds continued. The Passport Office now has an online
service, so effectively the queues are now in the internet cables.
An
express request for passport is now down to nine days - nine Ghanaian
days, like nine European days. A regular request is 21 days, he
explained.
"As we speak we don't even have 4,000 passports to
print" he reported much-needed success. With two printers churning 2,000
passports a day and a third back-up printer ready to play super-sub in
case of an emergency.
"These days, nobody even hears of break down at the passport office", his uncommon public sector triumph continued.
Ntrakwa
is a satisfied man. But he says he is not done yet. He wants the
Passport Office to look like any of the top banks in Ghana.
Before
he left the studio, he begged passionately, "the passport office still
needs infrastructure required to work. If we get something like an
auditorium where applicants go and they can see not less than 20
booths...I think it will ease the pressure on everybody.
Glossy
furniture. nice glass windows, cosy air-conditions, spacious, perfumed
offices and creative architecture that comes so easily to private banks.
"Kojo, this is unbelievable. it is just unbelievable", Francis, a caller from Achimota gushed.
A passport online and on time may not a big deal. But in Ghana, we thank God for small miracles.
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