- President Nana Akufo-Addo has been asked to halt his plans for deploying Ghanaian soldiers for an ECOWAS military intervention in Niger by Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, the North Tongu Representative in parliament and Ranking member of the foreign affairs committee.
- Ablakwa attacked Akufo-Addo for being undemocratic and careless in not submitting his Niger Policy to Parliament for proper review. He pleaded with Ghana’s military to stay away from the impending carnage and rising geopolitical conflict, which might have significant effects on stability in the unsettling area.
- He further emphasized how Akufo-Addo can exploit Ghana’s failing economy as a pretext to deny the Ghana Armed Forces access to all necessary supplies, equipment, and logistics.
- He also asked the leaders of ECOWAS to put an end to their belligerent behavior and give diplomacy and constructive discussion a chance, stressing that the Niger situation could be handled without violence or casualties.
- Furthermore, He urged African leaders to concentrate on the pressing problems of poor leadership, corruption, endemic poverty, democracy, high unemployment, a lack of opportunities, state capture, constitutional manipulation, tainted judiciaries, defunct institutions, neo-colonial exploitation, and a divided Africa.
- He claimed that Niger wasn’t the first country to lack a leadership reaction that was sincere, proper, introspective, and causal.
- President Nana Akufo-Addo has been asked to halt his plans for deploying Ghanaian soldiers for an ECOWAS military intervention in Niger by Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, the North Tongu Representative in parliament and Ranking member of the foreign affairs committee.
- Ablakwa attacked Akufo-Addo for being undemocratic and careless in not submitting his Niger Policy to Parliament for proper review. He pleaded with Ghana’s military to stay away from the impending carnage and rising geopolitical conflict, which might have significant effects on stability in the unsettling area.
- He further emphasized how Akufo-Addo can exploit Ghana’s failing economy as a pretext to deny the Ghana Armed Forces access to all necessary supplies, equipment, and logistics.
- He also asked the leaders of ECOWAS to put an end to their belligerent behavior and give diplomacy and constructive discussion a chance, stressing that the Niger situation could be handled without violence or casualties.
- Furthermore, He urged African leaders to concentrate on the pressing problems of poor leadership, corruption, endemic poverty, democracy, high unemployment, a lack of opportunities, state capture, constitutional manipulation, tainted judiciaries, defunct institutions, neo-colonial exploitation, and a divided Africa.
- He claimed that Niger wasn’t the first country to lack a leadership reaction that was sincere, proper, introspective, and causal.