Tag: Ghana

  • Ghana eyes Ukrainian drone tech amid Ukraine’s wartime struggles

    Ghana eyes Ukrainian drone tech amid Ukraine’s wartime struggles

    By Andriy Melnyk

    Ghana’s sudden interest in Ukrainian drones has taken many by surprise. It was reported that during a  phone conversation earlier this month, President John Dramani Mahama expressed strong enthusiasm for Ukrainian unmanned aerial systems, signaling Ghana’s intent to both purchase drones and support Ukraine’s drone manufacturing efforts financially. It’s a bold move, reflecting Ghana’s ambitions to modernize its security capabilities, but one that comes at a time when Ukraine’s own ability to deliver remains uncertain.

    The news broke through President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s social media post on July 11, where he shared that the two countries are looking to deepen their cooperation. While agricultural logistics and food distribution were part of the conversation, it was Ghana’s clear desire to access Ukraine’s drone expertise that stood out. Ukraine’s experience with drones in its ongoing war has made it a global innovator in the field, with thousands of drones deployed for surveillance, precision attacks, and electronic warfare. These tools, born of necessity, are proving to be valuable exports.

    According to Zelenskyy, Ghana is prepared to back Ukraine’s production lines financially in exchange for help in protecting its own borders. The conversation between the two leaders set in motion plans for a Ukrainian delegation to travel to Accra, where government officials will discuss the practical steps needed to turn the shared vision into actionable agreements.

    Despite the optimism, there are serious concerns about whether Ukraine is in any position to deliver defense equipment abroad, especially now. The country is fully engaged in a brutal war, and its military-industrial complex is stretched to its limits. Every available resource, from manpower to materials, is directed toward maintaining Ukraine’s own defense. Drone factories are working around the clock to supply the frontlines, leaving little room for exports.

    Over the past three years of war, international aid has kept Ukraine afloat, but it hasn’t been enough to cover the full scope of the country’s defense needs. European countries have been the main contributors, especially in financial and humanitarian aid, but military support now faces a turning point. At the outset of the war, most aid came from existing stockpiles. Today, those arsenals are nearly exhausted. As a result, weapons and munitions must be purchased directly from manufacturers, a much slower and costlier process. What was once a rapid response effort is now a long, drawn-out race between demand and supply chain limitations.

    This shift has transformed the war into a contest of industrial capacity. Ukraine’s defense manufacturers are under constant pressure to produce at scale and with speed, which leaves little flexibility for exporting systems abroad. The drone sector, hailed for its battlefield innovations, is especially strained. Committing drones or technologies to foreign partners like Ghana would require excess capacity Ukraine simply doesn’t have right now. As drone production is redirected almost exclusively to domestic needs, it’s unclear whether any side project—no matter how diplomatically valuable—can be prioritized.

    And while war limits Ukraine’s capabilities, corruption threatens to derail even the best-laid plans. The recent criminal charges against Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of Ukraine’s Anti-Monopoly Committee, were only the latest in a long string of scandals that continue to erode public trust. Investigators revealed that Kyrylenko and his family had amassed luxury properties and assets worth millions, sparking national outrage. It was a sharp reminder that corruption is not just a relic of the past—it remains deeply embedded in Ukraine’s institutions.

    The issue runs deeper than one official. Over the years, scandals have rocked everything from the Defense Ministry to national prosecutors.

    Read Also: Alleged forgery, false information: Court shifts trial of lawyer, three Ghanaians till October 

    One former defense minister was dismissed after it was discovered that food contracts for soldiers were being inflated—an emblematic case of opportunism during wartime. For countries like Ghana that might be considering investing in Ukrainian defense industries, this raises legitimate concerns about accountability, transparency, and whether funds will truly go where promised.

    These internal obstacles are compounded by external political uncertainty. Ukraine’s future military aid could be influenced by global political dynamics. Recently, former US President Donald Trump made headlines by threatening to impose trade consequences on Russia if no peace deal is reached within 50 days. While aimed at pushing for resolution, such rhetoric adds unpredictability to the entire military supply chain. If Ukraine’s allies recalibrate their support or shift their attention, the effects will ripple down to projects like Ghana’s proposed drone partnership.

    The dialogue between Presidents Mahama and Zelenskyy could be the beginning of something significant. But unless Ukraine can overcome the dual challenges of military strain and institutional corruption, the path from conversation to cooperation will remain steep and uncertain. Ghana’s ambitions are clear. Ukraine’s ability to deliver, however, remains a question that only time and peace can answer.

    Melnyk, a commentator on global affairs,writes from Kyiv    

  • Lekki Port begins transhipment to Togo, Ghana, Abidjan

    Lekki Port begins transhipment to Togo, Ghana, Abidjan

    Nigeria’s first deep seaport, Lekki Port, has announced that it has commenced transhipment operations to some ports in neighbouring countries like Togo, Ghana and Abidjan in Côte d’Ivoire.

    Addressing reporters in Lagos yesterday, its Deputy Chief Operating Officer, Daniel Odibe, said that the port also carried out a trial transhipment within Nigeria to Onne Port just recently.

    According to Odibe: “We had our first transhipment operations in 2023, which is the first in the Nigerian economy.

    Similarly, the firm revealed that $1.5 billion seaport has  concluded plans to ramp up operations from 287,000 Twenty-foot Equivalent Units (TEUs) handled in 2024 to 500,000 TEUs by the end of this year. He said out of 1.2 million TEUs capacity, the port is currently handling only about 20 per cent of its projected cargo throughput.

    According to Odibe, the Port is still targeting more international transhipment cargos from other West African countries.

    READ ALSO: Nurses, midwives give FG 15-day ultimatum, threaten nationwide strike

    “Before now, countries like Togo, Ghana, and Côte d’Ivoire used to be the transhipment hub for Nigerian-bound cargoes. You know what that means for our cargo? They spend more time coming to us. They incur more costs because they are double-handled in those transhipment hubs, all because Nigeria didn’t have a deep-sea port.

    “So, commencement of operations at Lekki Port changed the whole transhipment story. The story is in our favour right now. We are now talking about international transhipment. We are now doing international transhipment to other West African countries such as Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire, Abidjan, Togo and Cotonou.”

    The port, he said, intends “to expand to the rest of Africa. But most importantly, we hope to expand the local transhipment. Currently, you have ports like Warri, Calabar, Onne, and then we have inland ports like Onitsha and Burutu. Some of these ports foreign vessels don’t go there because the draft is low. So the idea here is to have cargoes for those ports. That will open up economic opportunities in those areas.

    “We did some trials last year with Onne. It had some challenges, but again, it was an eye-opener and we are looking at restarting that again this year in collaboration with the shipping lines and baggage operators.”

    On cargo throughput volume, Odibe explained that cargo volumes are now gradually improving as it processed 222,000 TEUs between January and June 2025.

    He added that “Lekki Port currently receives between 10-12 vessels every month. We are picking up because Naira is gradually stabilising.

    “Volumes fell because of Naira depreciation and the removal of fuel subsidy, and this caused a setback in our projection. As of 2023, when we started operations, we did 54,289 TEUs, and as of June of this year, we have done 222,000, and we are projecting 500,000 TEUs.”

    Odibe also stated that the vessel turnaround time at Lekki Port currently stands at 48 hours as against one hour and 25 minutes for truck turnaround time, while cargo dwell time is 16 days.

    Also, the Chief Operating Officer of Lekki Port, Yang Xixiong, said that Lekki Port will continue to raise the bar to international standards.

    “We continue to push the envelope, set the bar higher to uphold our position as West Africa’s deepest sea port.

    “The result of our unrelenting commitment to world-class standards is visible in the gigantic footprints we are putting on the map of maritime trade in Africa, deploying technology, driving operational efficiency, and shaping regional trade,” he said.

    Odibe attributed the shortfall to prevailing economic challenges that have impacted the port’s operations in recent times.

    According to him, the removal of fuel subsidies and the depreciation of the Naira against major foreign currencies have led to a decline in imports.

    He, however, noted that cargo volumes are now gradually improving as it processed 222,000 TEUs between January and June 2025.

    He added that transhipment activities to ports in neighbouring and landlocked countries have similarly increased.

    According to him: “Lekki Port currently receives between 10-12 vessels every month, and Lekki Port transhipment operations have also increased substantially.

    Lekki port, he said, “ is currently doing international transhipment to Togo, Benin Republic, Ghana and Abidjan, and some landlocked countries. We are picking up because the Naira is gradually picking up.

    Volumes, he said, “ fell because of Naira depreciation and the removal of the subsidy, and this caused a setback in our projection. As of 2023, when we started operations, we did 54,289 TEUs, and as of June of this year, we have done 222,000, and we are projecting 500,000 TEUs.”

    According to him, the vessel turnaround time at Lekki Port currently stands 48 hours as against one hour and 25 minutes for truck turnaround time, while cargo dwell time is 16 days.

    Also,, Managing Director Chief of the Port,  Wang Qiang, said that Lekki Port will continue to raise the bar to international standards.

    Wang, who was represented by Chief Operating Officer of the port, Young Qiang said: “We continue to push the envelope, set the bar higher to uphold our position as West Africa’s deepest sea port.

    “The result of our unrelenting commitment to world-class standards is visible in the gigantic footprints we are putting on the map of maritime trade in Africa, deploying technology, driving operational efficiency, and shaping regional trade,” he said.

  • Igbo leadership in Ghana denies acquisition of lands for setting up Igbo Village in Accra

    Igbo leadership in Ghana denies acquisition of lands for setting up Igbo Village in Accra

    The Eze Igbo Palace in Ghana has strongly denied social media rumours suggesting that the Igbo community has acquired land in Ningo in the Greater Accra Region to establish an “Igbo Village.”

    In a statement released by the Head of Communications, Mr. Ronney Gogo, the palace dismissed claims of a 50-acre (250-plot) land acquisition by Eze Ndi Igbo Ghana, His Royal Majesty Eze (Dr) Chukwudi Jude Ihenetu I, the Igbo traditional leader in Ghana.

    The statement clarified that no such purchase has been made either in Ningo or any other part of the country.

    The rumours appear to be rooted in a 2013 interview by Eze Ndi Igbo Ghana, granted to Crystal TV, which followed his coronation in September 2012.

    Read Also: Police smashes human trafficking gang, rescue 40 Ghanaians in Ondo

    According to the palace, the interview referenced initial ideas that were never realized due to legal implications concerning the rightful ownership of the land.

    “These plans were cancelled as far back as 2014,” the statement read. “There is currently no land in Ghana that has been designated for an ‘Igbo Village.’”

    Eze Ndi Igbo Ghana I, who has lived in Ghana since 1995 and is married to a Ghanaian businesswoman, is said to hold the culture and laws of Ghana in high esteem.

    The palace emphasized his long-standing commitment to fostering unity and maintaining the strong relationship between the Igbo and Ghanaian communities.

    “We would never engage in any activity that would damage the peaceful coexistence we enjoy here,” said Gogo.

    “Eze Ndi Igbo Ghana has consistently urged the Igbo community to remain law-abiding and respectful of their host country.”

    The palace concluded by reiterating that no land acquisition has taken place for the development of an Igbo settlement in Ghana.

  • Ghana stands still as AUBA holds second AGM at Labadi Beach Hotel

    Ghana stands still as AUBA holds second AGM at Labadi Beach Hotel

    The Republic of Ghana recently witnessed an uncommon visit: the unprecedented arrival of members of a powerful socio-cultural organization in Nigeria, the Akuluno United Brothers Association (AUBA).

    Led by High Chief Duru Mike Ejiogu (Onowu Anárá Ancient Kingdom), their private jets touched down at Kotoka International Airport for the second Annual General Meeting and Dinner Party of the prestigious club.

    The visibly elated pan-Igbo socio-cultural group was warmly received in a grand display of culture and hospitality by the Igbo Diaspora King in Ghana, His Royal Majesty, Eze (Dr.) Amb. Chukwudi Jude Ihenetu (Ezeigbo Ghana), alongside members of his elders-in-council and palace chiefs—a true testament to brotherhood, homecoming, and deep regard for their Igbo heritage in a foreign land.

    The following day, Saturday, June 7, 2025, members of the Billionaires’ Club—Akuluno United Brothers Association—held their second Annual General Meeting at the prestigious Labadi Beach Hotel and golf resort. Nestled on about 200 hectares of lush palm forest, the venue offers a serene atmosphere, pristine environment, and breathtaking coastline—an ideal setting for business meetings, international conferences, tourism, and leisure.

    The choice of Labadi Beach Hotel, Accra, once again reflected what AUBA stands for: class, luxury, excellence, lifestyle, camaraderie, and celebration.

    In his opening remarks, National President High Chief Duru Mike Ejiogu appreciated and recognized all members present for sharing the values of unity and progress. He praised their immeasurable contributions and cooperation, which have been instrumental in the growth of the association, now a leading socio-cultural force in Southeastern Nigeria.

    The event venue shone brightly as both old and newly inducted members appeared in elegant white senator attire with red caps—a traditional Igbo outfit symbolizing cultural heritage and identity. Its significance extends beyond Nigeria, with the potential to make a statement on the global fashion scene.

    A highlight of the epoch-making event was the induction of seven additional billionaires into AUBA. They took an oath of allegiance to uphold the association’s constitution, demonstrate honesty and integrity, and show unwavering solidarity with fellow members.

    The “Seven Wise Igbo Billionaires” inducted were: High Chief (Dr.) Amb. Ikenna Anthony Obele (Okwunze Aguata), Chairman, Mekens Group Nig. Ltd; Hon. Maduba Okechi Christian, renowned philanthropist and road construction giant; Chief Dr. Anderson Okoro (Nmiri Oma Na Awauzor I of Abam), CEO, Ceemore Group of Companies; High Chief Ojimba Felix (Ekweme I of Akokwa Kingdom), Chairman, HRTech Global Associates Ltd and CEO, Seed Beverages Nig. Ltd; HRM Dr. Chris Maduabuchi Umeh (Ezeigbo Gburugburu I of Japan | Igwe Ara Nazu Nwa), CEO, Transtell Group and BON Hotel Transtell Asaba; High Chief Chikodili Fidelis Ojimba (Nnanyereugo I of Izzi Kingdom), CEO, JP Chris Motors Nig. Ltd; High Chief Egbunike Dominic Puma (Ikenga Uduakomili of Umunnachi), CEO, Madon Thick Aluminum Ltd.

    Remarkably, in a country where social clubs are often viewed merely as gatherings for showmanship and entertainment, Akuluno United Brothers Association has distinguished itself. It seamlessly blends business networking, solidarity, capacity building, philanthropy, community development, and brotherhood.

    For any organization aiming to transcend generations, the future is not a destination but a creation. With unwavering determination and a bold vision, AUBA has a clear picture of the future it envisions for Southeastern Nigeria and all Igbo-speaking states.

    Read Also: EzeIgbo Ghana Ihenetu celebrates King Ateke Tom on birthday  

    Through a well-tailored developmental agenda, AUBA has not only redefined the dynamics of social clubs in Nigeria but is also filling developmental gaps by creating jobs and driving infrastructural development across their home states.

    The three-day event concluded on Sunday, June 8, 2025, with a dinner party where Anyidons and Aro Nwateje thrilled guests with sensational Igbo highlife music. The occasion also celebrated the national patron of AUBA, Engr. Arthur Eze (Arthur Eze N’Ukpor).

    National President High Chief Duru Mike Ejiogu (Onowu Anara), National Leader and Founder Chief Evans Chukwukadibia Emesim (Okwumereze I of Ukpor), First Vice President Chief Dr. Gideon Chidiebere Osi (Ikenga Ishiagu), and BOT Chairman Chief Ebere Goodwill Uzozie (Onwa Umuobom Kingdom), alongside their colorful entourage, paid a heartwarming courtesy call to the Igbo Diaspora King in Ghana, HRM Eze (Dr.) Amb. Chukwudi Jude Ihenetu. They were hosted to a sumptuous lunch at the Obiigbo Royal Palace, East Legon, Accra—a deep show of respect for traditional institutions and a demonstration of unalloyed support for the Igbo diaspora throne in Ghana.

    During the visit, High Chief Duru Mike Ejiogu, Chief Evans Chukwukadibia Emesim, Chief Dr. Gideon Chidiebere Osi, Chief Dr. Ebere Goodwill Uzozie, and Chief Sir Kelvin Chukwumaobi (Chairman, APAMS) were conferred with the prestigious Ndigbo Diaspora Awards in recognition of their contributions to community development and the promotion of Igbo culture and tradition.

    For the Akuluno United Brothers Association, this journey to Ghana was more than an annual general meeting or an award ceremony—it was a powerful reminder that no matter how far an Igbo man travels, home is never just a place. It is the people who keep your traditions alive, always waiting to welcome you like family.

  • Bjorkegren: Ghana, Nigeria Friendly tie will help gauge Black Queens preparedness

    Bjorkegren: Ghana, Nigeria Friendly tie will help gauge Black Queens preparedness

    Ghana Black Queens head coach Kim Lars Bjorkegren believes  their confrontation with the Super Falcons will help gauge the level of preparedness of his wards ahead of the Women’s African Cup of Nations (WAFCON) in Morocco.

    The highly anticipated fixture is one of three international friendlies lined up for the Black Queens this month as part of their build-up to the 2025 CAF Women’s Africa Cup of Nations.

    Read Also: VIVA VICTOR: Osimhen wows at Wilfred Ndidi’s star-studded Maracana Children’s Fest

    In a pre-match interview, Bjorkegren emphasized the importance of facing top-tier opposition to sharpen his team’s readiness for the continental showpiece.

    “We want to test ourselves against different playing styles and team dynamics. Malawi and Benin Republic provide technical and disciplined opposition, while Nigeria offers the challenge of a traditional powerhouse,” Bjorkegren told the Ghana FA website.

    Ghana will kicked off their friendly series against Malawi on Saturday  at the Ziaida Complex in Benslimane with a 3&1 victory , followed by a match against Benin Republic that replaced Botswana on June 25.

    They will conclude their preparations with a high-profile showdown against Nigeria on Friday, June 29, at the Lanouria Complex.

  • Flying Eagles land Ghana, Benin in WAFU B war

    Flying Eagles land Ghana, Benin in WAFU B war

    The draw of the WAFU-B U20 Boys’ Cup has been officially concluded, setting the stage for an intense regional showdown among West Africa’s rising football talents.

    The tournament is scheduled to take place from July 10 to July 23, 2024, in Accra, Ghana.

    The draw ceremony, which was held in Accra on Friday, grouped the seven participating teams into two groups—Group A and Group B—with the top teams vying for regional bragging rights.

    Group A features three heavyweight teams, with hosts Ghana squaring off against regional rivals Nigeria and Benin Republic.

    Read Also: NFF endorses Sam Okwaraji’s Championship

    The clash between Nigeria and Ghana, two of the most successful footballing nations in West Africa, is expected to be one of the marquee fixtures of the group stage.

    Benin Republic, meanwhile, will look to replicate or improve on their strong showing in recent tournaments and disrupt the expected Nigeria-Ghana dominance in the group.

    Group B comprises four nations and is expected to be fiercely contested. Burkina Faso and Côte d’Ivoire, known for producing technically gifted players, will headline the group.

  • How Ghana tamed fuel prices–and what Nigeria can learn

    How Ghana tamed fuel prices–and what Nigeria can learn

    By Adetoun Alamutu

    Accra hums with chaos: vendors weaving through traffic, taxis honking, and sometimes, you can catch the scent of grilling plantain in the nasal salad of vehicle exhaust. 

    Accra is like Lagos, but not quite—just a little tamer.

    However, in Ghana, despite not being immune to global oil shocks, you won’t find as many arguments over petrol prices as in Nigeria. 

    Still, its petrol prices seem to fluctuate within a more predictable band. 

    In Ghana, there are no overnight petrol price hikes, no rumours of backroom deals. This isn’t even magic. It is a system that is built on transparency and one that Nigeria, even as we might be teetering on the edge of pricing chaos, should study attentively. 

     *Ghana’s No Secrets, No Monopolies Model* 

    Ghana’s National Petroleum Authority (NPA) publishes a pricing formula that accounts for international crude prices, exchange rates, distribution margins and taxes. 

    Every two weeks, prices are published and open to everyone from drivers to petrol station owners and even competitors. 

    This openness helps achieve two things: first, it prevents any single player from hijacking the narrative. 

    As a consequence, whenever prices rise, the “why” is not a mystery. 

    Second, it allows the market to maintain its fragmentation. 

    No company can establish control of the supply chain. No system is perfect. 

    While this system does not entirely eliminate profiteering, it is harder to manipulate prices, especially when the math is public and the market is full of small and nimble competitors. 

    An Uber driver in West Legon put it bluntly, “If one station tries to cheat, we will drive to the next.” 

     *Nigeria’s Deregulation Dilemma: When Freedom Has No Map* 

    Nigeria, on the other hand, seems to be stumbling through a deregulation experiment that feels less like policy and more like the fat man falling and rolling and waiting for something to stop him. 

    After decades of subsidies, the government finally stepped back with the expectation that market forces would stabilise prices, and, to an extent, we have seen that. 

    But there is still market uncertainty. Petrol stations adjust rates daily and sometimes hourly. 

    Our Federal Competition & Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), tasked with policing anti-competitive action in the market, has been criticised as “toothless” as it seems unable or unwilling to rein in cartel-like behaviour. 

    The irony is that market deregulation was supposed to invite competition. 

    But, without guardrails, Nigeria is tending towards a Wild West where the strongest bully might dominate. 

    Read Also: NMDPRA reaffirms FG’s commitment to steady fuel supply, distribution

    Deregulated market competition is to allow petrol to flow into Nigeria at market-competitive prices. 

    But a pending court case could revoke the import licenses instead, arguing that Nigeria’s mega-refinery–the world’s largest single train facility–makes those imports obsolete. On paper, this is great. 

    A homegrown goliath can meet domestic demand. But in reality, this is a gamble. 

     *One Refinery Will Never Be Enough* 

    First, I must explain. I am not anti-local refinery. Domestic production is extremely important. But, Nigeria can not build its house on one pillar by pinning its petrol supply to a single entity. 

    If we lived in a Nigeria with several refineries of this scale, this op-ed would never have existed. 

    What if maintenance shuts down the refinery? What if global crude prices swing? What if–and let us remember we are in Nigeria–logistics have a hiccup or debt delays deliveries? 

    Ghana’s model works because it acknowledges a messy truth we are too proud to consider: redundancy is safety. 

    When there are multiple importers, supply chains stay flexible. Players in the market compete not only on price but reliability. Nigeria’s refinery could be a crown jewel, but it should not be the only jewel. 

    Everybody must compete on merit and not mandate. 

     *The Ghost of Subsidies Past* 

    Nigeria’s regulators seem to be trapped between old habits and new ideals. 

    In the previous pricing regime, the culture of dependency for consumers and also the government, controlling prices through back channels, was born. 

    But now, that muscle memory seems to linger. The FCCPC’s reluctance to act on allegations of price fixing feels less like corruption and more like confusion. 

    Ghana’s NPA is not flawless. Market players and critics complain about bureaucratic delays. But, its commitment to transparency has put an end to any perceptions and insinuations of favouritism. 

    There are no whispers of special deals. Everything is public. 

     *Moving Forward?* Revoking licenses would betray the spirit of deregulation and unwittingly hand a monopoly to the refinery. True market freedom means that consumers and not the courts or people in government, decide winners. 

    Even as the refinery asserts that it offers a reliable supply and fair prices, let importers keep testing those terms. This is not hypothetical. 

    In Ghana, oil marketing companies are unable to gouge prices because competitors can notice discrepancies and alert regulators. 

    The NMDPRA and FCCPC should borrow this playbook: publish a clear pricing framework, demand real-time price reporting, encourage whistleblowing, and most importantly, keep the gates open. 

    Every importer is a check against complacency. Human “Efficiency” I need to admit that I sympathise and understand the argument the refinery makes. 

    One massive operation can streamline costs and boost exports. Consolidation is efficient. 

    But where there’s centralised efficiency, there is also fragility; centralised systems break, and that could be catastrophic. 

    Nigeria’s COVID-19 lockdowns showed us how dire shortages could be when our borders were closed. 

    After efficiency, we need to have equity, too. When a single player controls a market, wages will stagnate, innovation will slow down, and the regions outside the supply chain will get neglected. 

    Just like Nigeria, Ghana’s fragmented and decentralised market employs thousands, not just in Accra, but in villages where small stations often double as community hubs. 

     *A Closing Half Thought* 

    Transparency is not the ultimate-everything fix. Nigeria’s petrol problems are rooted in much deeper issues. 

    But Ghana shows that sunlight is a decent disinfectant. Let’s have public prices. Let importers keep the market honest. 

    Maybe, when we give Nigerians the tools to compare, we can trust them to choose better. 

    The court ruling looms. I read another Nigerian write about how regulators and not courts should decide regulatory matters like import licences, and I agree wholeheartedly. 

    If import licences disappear, that is also the end of the last lever in ensuring market choice. 

    Nigeria’s leaders promised that deregulation would be the end of an era of artificial scarcity. 

    They will soon have to decide if that promise includes freedom or a different kind of control. 

    •Adetoun Alamutu, a multidisciplinary storyteller and Head of Story for Culture Custodian, writes from Lagos.

  • UK deports 43 to Nigeria, Ghana as border security plan intensifies

    UK deports 43 to Nigeria, Ghana as border security plan intensifies

    The United Kingdom Government has deported 43 individuals, including failed asylum seekers and convicted foreign offenders to Nigeria and Ghana as part of its ongoing border security measures under the “Plan for Change.”

    According to a report published Friday on gov.uk, the deportees included 15 failed asylum seekers, 11 foreign national offenders who had completed their prison terms, and seven individuals who voluntarily agreed to return.

    This marks the second deportation flight to Nigeria and Ghana since the last general election, raising the total number of deportees to these two West African nations to 87. Officials highlight that this reflects strengthening diplomatic ties and cooperation on immigration enforcement between the UK, Nigeria, and Ghana.

    Since the current administration assumed office, over 24,000 individuals have been deported—a figure representing an 11% increase compared to the previous year. Deportations of foreign national offenders specifically rose by 16%, with 3,594 criminals removed from the country.

    Authorities emphasised that all removals were conducted “in a dignified and respectful manner.”

    Angela Eagle, the UK’s Minister for Border Security and Asylum, commented, “This flight demonstrates how international partnerships deliver on working people’s priorities for swift returns and secure borders. Through the Plan for Change, we’re going further in restoring order to a broken system, accelerating returns of those with no right to be here and closing expensive asylum hotels.”

    She thanked the governments of Nigeria and Ghana for their role in facilitating the deportations, stressing the mutual commitment to disrupting organized immigration crime.

    Baroness Chapman of Darlington, Minister for Irregular Migration at the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO), added, “Working internationally is critical to tackling irregular migration. I welcome our strong cooperation with Ghana and Nigeria to return those with no right to be in the UK and deliver on the Plan for Change.”

    This deportation operation follows the Organised Immigration Crime Summit, where the UK convened over 40 countries, including Nigeria and Ghana, to intensify the global fight against smuggling gangs and secure international borders.

  • I can’t marry woman with high body count – Ghanaian singer Kidi

    I can’t marry woman with high body count – Ghanaian singer Kidi

    Ghanaian singer Dennis Dwamena, popularly known as Kidi, has stated that he wouldn’t settle for a woman with a high body count but rather use them as flings.

    The ‘Cheat On You’ hitmaker shared in a recent episode of the Ghanaian Gen Z podcast, Rants, Bants And Confessions, that he is open to having short s3xual relationships with women with high body counts but can’t consider a serious relationship or marriage with them.

    The co-host asked: “When it comes to body counts, does it matter how many men a woman has been with?”

    Kidi replied: “If you are just having a good time, we are having fun, I don’t care. But if you are somebody I am going to be calling mine, it matters.

    “I don’t want to walk into a space and all the guys there are looking at me somehow because they have history with the woman I am with. I don’t want a woman who has slept with too many men. Because then, when I meet you, I am meeting a very degraded version of you.”

    Read Also: Ikidi welcomes Ordega to Swedish club

    The co-host asked: “How are you meeting a degraded version of the person?”

    Kidi replied: “By the time I get there, you have given yourself emotionally to 50 men who have all obviously done you wrongs in some way because you are still single; that means 50 people that you have been with did not work.

    “We all know that when you give yourself to people, after it doesn’t work, you shed a part of you. There is some bit of you that you shed when you leave somebody, you go to the next person, you shed some part of you, you go to somebody else, and repeat because you learn something from there. If you’ve shed 50 bits of you, what is left for me?”

  • Ghana under an Nkrumaist president

    Ghana under an Nkrumaist president

    • By Banji Ojewale

    Here in Anyaa, Accra, capital of Ghana, I’ve come across some of the country’s leading newspapers. Their contents—news reports, opinions, vox pop, book reviews, cartoons, (dearth of these), sports, photo stories, advertorials etc. – give me a larger-than-life image of the Ghanaian society.  The two oldest journals, Daily Graphic and Ghanaian Times, with their sister weeklies, The Mirror and The Spectator respectively, are on parade.  The later appearances, Daily Guide, The Ghanaian Chronicle, Modern Ghana (online), The Insight, Finder, Business Ghana, and Statesman etc. have also been consulted, considered or captured for this short essay.

    Ghana no longer has evening sheets. Kwame Nkrumah, the country’s founding president, introduced an Accra evening paper in the late 40s to fight colonial rule and give a voice to the local population. In the 60s, there was also the popular Evening Times. Since then, there’s been no serious contention for a comeback.

    The national broadcaster, Ghana Broadcasting Corporation, GBC, together with a rash of a mixed multitude of FM stations and TV outlets across the Black Star country, constitutes bottomless depths of resources to guide a sweeping view of life in this former Gold Coast land.

    Therefore, whether what you get from them comes down as skewed or straight, embellished or exposed, some wandering warts would rebel and escape through to settle the argument. So you can’t but end up with a fair grip of the unhidden state of the society. This is in defence of the media–of any hue. I don’t believe we should be paranoid about perceptions of the media’s so-termed anti-system or anti-social bent. They are better to be with us, than not to have them. A necessary ‘evil’, some might conclude. An iconoclastic American president, Thomas Jefferson, said long ago that he preferred a society with newspapers without a government to one with a government denied the media.

    So, from the press, I have observed Ghanaians welcoming their new leader, John Dramani Mahama, a left of centre Nkrumahist. He swept the ballot last December with the flag of National Democratic Congress, NDC, the party formed by the very much admired Jerry Rawlings. At most campaign scenes, Mahama told wild ecstatic crowds that he’d return to what Nkrumah stood for: developing a progressive and organic society, freeing the grassroots from elite control, pursuing Pan-Africanism, reviewing Ghana’s relationship with Western financial institutions, International Monetary Fund, IMF and the World Bank etc. He says also that Founder’s Day, as Nkrumah’s birthday is called, would receive more national acclaim.

    The point critics are raising, however, is that although this great African seems to have been fully rehabilitated over the decades after the February 24, 1966 coup overthrew him, there remains the ideological business of rebuilding the Convention Peoples Party, CPP, Nkrumah formed to propel Ghana into history. For many, it’s not enough that we already have Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah’s totems of homage all over: Mausoleum, a university, streets, intersection, and research centres etc. But many wonder why all who were nostalgic about Nkrumaism went on to form their own political parties instead of simply going back to their hero’s dear old organization. A military ruler and closet Nkrumah sympathizer, Ignatius Acheampong, frittered the opportunity to recall Nkrumah from exile in Guinea in 1972 for his reinstatement.

    Read Also: Why I visited Tinubu, by Ghana’s President Mahama

    Then there’s the Kotoka International Airport, Accra, matter. The hawks want the president to rename the facility. They argue that you can’t claim to honour Nkrumah and still celebrate Emmanuel Kotoka, the military officer who led the United States’ Central Intelligence Agency-inspired putsch against the revered Ghanaian leader. 

    Meanwhile, when Ghanaians celebrated their nation’s 68th Independence in March, the new government came up with this mantra: Reflect. Review. Reset. It is the charge that the citizens must reflect on the past; they would then review it, and reset it. Partly, it’s a huge and disconcerting admission that Ghana isn’t where the founding fathers projected it. Hence, there’s urgent need to reset (redirect) the journey. The administration just displaced didn’t face these challenges squarely, Mahama says. It left behind a lot of rot. Fiery cabinet member, Sam Nartey George, says the old government operated on legislation that “belonged to the museum.” The sitting government has also alluded to a frenzy of embezzlement under the ancien regime. It has set up Operation Recover All Loot, ORAL, whose ruthless agents crash into bedrooms seizing cash and jewellery of ex-public officers.

    The government is in high spirits, saying its policies and new budget would truly ‘reset’ Ghana to the vision of the Nkrumah era. Ernest Kofi Adu, who covers the parliament for the Daily Guide newspaper says the “2025 (projections) present a blend of ambitious policies and potential challenges.” The opposition New Patriotic Party, NPP, has acidic comments on the budget, however. It says it’s lopsided, as it gives more funds to satisfy the palatial palate of the Presidency than it has given the youth and women ministries put together.

    The government has dismissed the charge, referring to its 24-Hour Economy Agenda, 24-HE, as the magic lever “ensuring that employment opportunities are not dictated by location, but talent and competence… equitable employment, economic flexibility and sustainable business growth.”

    Ghanaians are also debating the petitions said to have been sent to President Mahama for the removal of the Chief Justice. What she’s accused of, is still shrouded. But there are strong indications she would go. Liberal watchers want Mahama to be gender-smart. His NDC has been accused of not being friendly towards the fair sex, despite having a female as his vice. They are pointing at Namibia where a woman has just been sworn in as the president. They are also reminding him of the 30th anniversary of the Beijing Affirmative Action on women this year.

    Ghana under an Nkrumaist is still at war with galamseyers, the armed illegal miners destroying the forests and water sources of the land. The Bawku communal crisis in the far north hasn’t abated, in spite of security intervention and pleas by Mahama.

    The stakeholders on the religious front are not missing from the media watch. There’s Reverend Tayo Aremu of Mark Hayford Memorial Baptist Church on Hansen Road, Accra. He refuses to be addressed as the shepherd of the assembly, preferring to be called undershepherd. His Master Jesus Christ, he says, is the Shepherd. It was the first time I saw such ecclesiastical self-effacement in Ghana. Elsewhere, on the other hand, another ‘man of God’ asked his audience on the radio to come for coins that would lead them to breakthroughs. At a session, when a caller said his ailment was addiction to akpeteshie (ogogoro), the ‘servant of heaven’ asked the drunkard to come along for healing with a bottle of the drink!

    On the sports scene, Ghana under an Nkrumaist is returning to old-time blaze in football. In two 2026 World Cup qualifiers, home and away, the Black Stars have scored eight goals, conceding none. For a country once hosting the best of African football, the citizens are not composing new victory songs. They are going into the archives, looking for what the people sang to hail the all-conquering Black Stars of old.

    • Ojewale, an author, sent this article from Accra, Ghana.