Ghana News
Ghana–EU Partnership Becomes ‘Indispensable’ as Sahel Crisis Escalates
The European Union’s top envoy for the Sahel, João Cravinho, says Ghana has become an indispensable partner in confronting the rapidly deteriorating security landscape across the Sahel.
He warns that the crisis now threatens both West Africa and Europe in equal measure.
According ot the UN, the Sahel, a vast semi-arid region in Africa that includes the countries of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, is experiencing one of the world’s most severe humanitarian and protection crises.
Cravinho, who wrapped up a three-day mission to Ghana on Friday, December 5, 2025, said the EU’s engagements in Accra and Tamale reaffirmed a simple but urgent truth: the instability stretching from Mali through Burkina Faso to Niger can no longer be viewed as a distant problem.
“We know from experience that terrorist organisations do not stay where they are,” he told journalists after touring the Kwame Nkrumah Mausoleum. “They are a curse for the populations immediately affected, and they become a threat to others. European security is threatened by the establishment of terrorist organisations in the Sahel.”
Indiscriminate attacks by armed groups and militias, insecurity, widespread human right violations, including gender-based violence and violence against children, and the effects of climate change have triggered massive displacements across the Sahel region.
‘A partnership we need — not just one we want’
In unusually candid remarks, Cravinho said the EU now sees Ghana as a “reliable and necessary” partner — not only because of its democratic stability, but because of its strategic location at the gateway to coastal West Africa.
His meetings with President John Mahama, Foreign Affairs Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, top national security officials, and agencies working directly on counter-terrorism, he said, underscored a shared recognition: the next one to two years will be critical for preventing the Sahel’s instability from cascading southward.
Ghanaian officials, he added, repeatedly described the EU as a “fundamental partner” in safeguarding the region — a sentiment he said was matched on the European side.
Why the urgency? Shifting geopolitics and a widening conflict
Cravinho pointed to several factors accelerating the need for closer cooperation: a surge in jihadist activity across Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger, five coups in three years in the Sahel, Burkina Faso’s conflict spilling toward northern Ghana, shifts in U.S. policy toward Africa, creating new uncertainty in the region’s broader security architecture
Together, he said, these changes demand tighter Ghana–EU coordination — on intelligence, border security, humanitarian support, and long-term development strategies.
Tamale visit: ‘Reading about the Sahel is one thing. Seeing its impact is another.’
Cravinho’s stop in Tamale, close to the Sahel’s southern edge, appears to have made a strong impression.
“It is different to read about the Sahel from a distance,” he said. “Going to the northern region and listening to people on the ground — whether the army, police, immigration or civil society — gives a deeper sense of the pressures and dynamics, particularly from Burkina Faso.”
Local security officials reportedly briefed him on how escalating violence in Burkina Faso has intensified migration pressures and heightened the risk of extremist infiltration.
For Europe, the stakes are equally high. Instability in the Sahel fuels displacement, extremism, and transnational threats that inevitably ripple northward.
Cravinho’s visit — and his unusually blunt warnings — reflect a growing consensus in European diplomatic circles: protecting the Sahel’s southern flank is no longer optional. It is strategic.
And Ghana, he says, will remain central to that effort.
Ghana News
Russian Embassy Criticized for “Empty” Statement on Viral Exploitation Videos involving Citizen
The Embassy of the Russian Federation in Ghana has issued a brief statement in the wake of widespread public anger and social media uproar over allegations that Russian nationals are luring young Ghanaian women into filmed sexual encounters for online distribution without consent.
The release posted on X on February 16, 2026, fails to condemn the alleged exploitation, non-consensual recording, and distribution of intimate material by its nationals.
“The Embassy of the Russian Federation in the Republic of Ghana has taken note of the reports in the Ghanaian media on the alleged involvement of a supposedly Russian citizen engaged in sexual activities with some Ghanaian women and recorded those acts without consent,” the post read.
The response comes after days of viral outrage on X, TikTok, Instagram, and WhatsApp groups, where screenshots, testimonies, and alleged links to explicit content prompted hashtags such as #ProtectGhanaianWomen and #StopTheRussianScheme.
MP Sam George, chair of the Parliamentary Committee on Gender, Children and Social Protection, has announced Ghana’s intent to pursue extradition if the primary suspect.
Responses on X
Responses to the post have been stronly worded. One person posted:
“Never trust those Russian scum. They throw African men into their war as cannon fodder & treat African women like disposable sex toys. Pure racist evil. Predators, not partners. WAKE UP AFRICA.”
Another asked:
“Any action taken?”
Another asked:
“So after taking the note, what next?”
Ghanaian authorities have disclosed they will pursue extradition proceedings against the man, said to have left Ghana.
The decision was announced by Member of Parliament Sam George on February 13, 2026, following weeks of public outrage over the alleged scheme.
According to Sam George — who chairs the Parliamentary Committee on Gender, Children and Social Protection — the suspect is believed to be a Russian national who used dating apps and social media to target young Ghanaian women, particularly students and professionals in Accra and other urban centres.
Victims were reportedly lured with promises of money, gifts or relationships, only to discover later that explicit videos were uploaded to adult websites and shared in private groups, often leading to blackmail, humiliation and threats.
Ghana News
Russian Man Who Secretly Filmed Ghanaian Women Reportedly Arrested in Tokyo
A now-viral video purports to show the Russian national who previously gained attention in Ghana for controversial secret videos being arrested in Tokyo.
The video captures the man often identified in online reports by the username “Yaytsesl” being handcuffed and his rights being read to him by a Japanese law enforcement officer.
Arrest captured in partially verified video
The partially blurred footage circulating online shows Japanese police officers informing the man of his rights to remain silent in English while placing him under arrest.
In the video, officers say they had reviewed his online content before taking action.
The man is heard responding that he had never been arrested before and asking what personal items he would be allowed to bring.
The authenticity of the footage has not been independently verified.
Background: online activity linked to Ghana controversy
The suspect had drawn international attention after posting videos involving escapes with women in Kenya and Ghana that sparked widespread backlash.
The content allegedly included exploitative online material tied to vulnerable individuals, which triggered outrage among social media users and prompted calls for investigation.
Ghanaian authorities later confirmed they were aware of the situation and had initiated inquiries into the man’s activities while he was in the country. Officials indicated they were cooperating with international partners as part of broader investigations.
Reports from African and Russian media described the man as a self-proclaimed “pick-up artist” and online blogger in his 30s who travelled to Ghana and other African countries, where he allegedly recorded interactions with women without their knowledge.
Media outlets in both regions also alleged that he used sunglasses equipped with a hidden camera to capture some of the encounters and later shared the footage on social media, although authorities have not officially confirmed these claims.
Cross-border legal implications
Japanese police have not publicly disclosed the exact charges, but the arrest, if confirmed, highlights how digital activity can lead to international law enforcement action. Authorities reportedly acted after reviewing evidence linked to his online conduct.
The case has also sparked debate in Ghana about online exploitation, digital regulation, and the protection of vulnerable populations in the age of social media.
In Ghana, under the Cybersecurity Act 2020, the law punishes those who share nude photos or videos online, especially of women and children, often for revenge or blackmail.
Ghana News
Several Ghanaian Traders Feared Dead in the Brutal Terrorist Attack in Burkina Faso
Several Ghanaian traders are feared dead after a truck carrying tomato merchants from Ghana was attacked by suspected terrorists in Titao, Burkina Faso, on Saturday, February 14, 2026.
In an official statement issued on February 14, 2026, Ghana’s Ministry of the Interior and National Security described the incident as “disturbing,” reflecting the gravity of the situation, but kept its lips tight about casualties.

The release, signed by Minister Mohammed-Mubarak Muntaka (MP), stated that the vehicle transporting the traders was caught in the terrorist attack in the northern Burkinabè town of Titao, near the Ghana border.
“The Ghana Embassy in Burkina Faso is liaising with the officials of Burkina Faso to visit the attack site for details and identification of Ghanaians caught in the attack,” the statement read. “Further details would be communicated to the public.”
While no official casualty figures have been released by Ghanaian or Burkinabè authorities as of February 15, 2026, and the identities of those affected remain unconfirmed, reports on social media, where the news about the attack first broke, suggest at least seven of the traders hit have died.
The attack took place in a region of Burkina Faso that has seen frequent jihadist incursions by groups linked to al-Qaeda and Islamic State affiliates operating in the Sahel.
Cross-border trade in agricultural goods, especially tomatoes, onions, and other perishables, is a major economic lifeline for communities on both sides of the Ghana-Burkina Faso frontier. However, escalating insecurity in northern Burkina Faso has increasingly disrupted commercial movements, raised insurance costs, and threatened livelihoods.
The Ministry’s prompt public communication reflects growing concern over the safety of Ghanaian nationals operating in volatile border areas. Ghanaian consular officials are expected to provide further updates as more information emerges from the joint site visit.
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