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Ghana Excluded From Trump’s Immigration Suspension of ‘Third World Countries’

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Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa and Rolf Olson

Ghana has been excluded from the United States government’s latest immigration suspension and Green Card review.

Ghana’s foreign minister, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, says the U.S. decision reflects improving bilateral relations between the two countries at a time when Washington is rolling out its most sweeping immigration restrictions in years.

The confirmation came from Ablakwa on Tuesday, December 2, 2025, who disclosed after a meeting with Acting U.S. Ambassador to Ghana, Rolf Olson, that Ghana was not part of the countries flagged in America’s new immigration directive.

The directive, therefore, blocks immigration from what President Donald Trump described as “all Third World countries” while ordering U.S. agencies to re-examine all Green Card applications from 19 identified “countries of concern.”

For many Ghanaians watching Washington’s increasingly hard-line approach, the exemption lands as a relief.

A Diplomatic Win Amid Global Uncertainty

Ablakwa said his talks with Ambassador Olson highlighted several positive milestones in Ghana–U.S. relations: the restoration of five-year visas for Ghanaian travelers, the removal of Trump-era tariffs on cocoa and other agricultural exports, and — most notably — Ghana’s omission from the Green Card review and immigration freeze.

“That exclusion was no coincidence,” one senior foreign affairs official in Accra, speaking on background, noted. “It reflects careful diplomacy and Ghana’s reputation as a stable, reliable partner in West Africa.”

Ghanaian officials also say the U.S. exemption comes at a critical moment, as global migration politics harden and developing countries face broad-brush restrictions that fail to reflect individual national track records.

Trump’s Broad Suspension Raises Global Alarms

Trump’s latest immigration order — announced in the aftermath of a shooting involving an Afghan national in Washington, D.C. — has raised concern among human rights advocates and several foreign governments.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump said he would “permanently pause migration from all Third World countries” and remove any immigrant who is “not a net asset” to the United States.

He further vowed to denaturalize those he claims “undermine domestic tranquillity” and deport anyone deemed a “public charge” or “non-compatible with Western civilization.”

The sweeping language, and the ambiguity of who is included under the term “Third World,” has drawn global criticism.

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Director Joseph Edlow has already ordered a “full-scale” review of Green Card applications from citizens of 19 nations — including Afghanistan, Iran, Haiti, Myanmar, Venezuela and Yemen — citing national security. The government also moved to freeze all immigration requests from Afghans pending additional vetting.

Accra and Washington Deepen Security Cooperation

Against this backdrop, Ghana’s continued diplomatic stability appears to be paying off.

Ablakwa revealed that beyond immigration matters, security cooperation with the U.S. has intensified. Citing the longstanding Defence Cooperation Agreement, he said both countries have increased intelligence-sharing, military training exchanges, and coordinated use of U.S. aviation assets — all aligned with Ghana’s regional security priorities.

“Ghana welcomes this collaboration on our shared security goals,” the minister wrote. “Aviation activities will always be coordinated with the appropriate authorities.”

Analysts note this cooperation may have strengthened U.S. confidence in Ghana’s reliability as a partner, especially amid rising insecurity in parts of the Sahel and growing geopolitical competition in West Africa.

Ablakwa also expressed optimism about ongoing negotiations concerning the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), a trade program vital to Ghanaian exporters. With the U.S. periodically reviewing beneficiary status, Ghana is eager to secure favorable terms going into future cycles.

A Relationship Built on Mutual Interest

While Trump’s immigration suspensions are expected to reshape travel, migration and asylum pathways for millions worldwide, Ghana’s exemption underscores the value of consistent diplomatic engagement — and the importance of maintaining strategic alliances even in turbulent geopolitical climates.

“Ghana–US relations will continue to prioritize the best deals for the people we serve,” Ablakwa said. “Our strategic national interest remains our guiding principle.”

For many Ghanaians abroad and at home, staying off Washington’s restricted list is not just a diplomatic victory — it is a lifeline in a shifting global order where migration windows can close overnight.

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Ghana Launches Push to Force Action on Slavery Reparations

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Foreign Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa says Ghana is building a “strong global coalition” to implement a UN resolution declaring the transatlantic slave trade the “gravest crime against humanity” — and restitution of stolen artifacts is non-negotiable.


ACCRA — Ghana has launched a major diplomatic offensive to transform a historic United Nations resolution into concrete action, with Foreign Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa announcing that the country is building a “strong global coalition” to push for implementation of measures addressing the legacy of the transatlantic slave trade.

The resolution, introduced by Ghana and supported by the African Union, was adopted by the UN General Assembly on March 25. It declares the transatlantic slave trade the “gravest crime against humanity,” language that carries significant moral and legal weight in international affairs.

But Ablakwa made clear during an engagement with the diplomatic corps in Accra on Wednesday that Ghana will not allow the resolution to remain a symbolic gesture.

“We seek to build a strong global coalition to push for the implementation of the UN resolution,” Ablakwa told assembled diplomats, acknowledging that the global community stood with Ghana and Africa in promoting the resolution through their votes, advocacy, and engagement throughout the negotiation process.

‘Not Generosity, but Justice’

The Foreign Minister was explicit about what implementation means — and what it does not.

Ghana’s push for reparatory justice is not aimed at mobilizing funds for Africa’s development, Ablakwa said, but rather at securing “restitution, healing, and the return of stolen artefacts.”

“A particularly consequential element of the resolution is its call for prompt and unhindered restitution of cultural properties, including artifacts, monuments, manuscripts and archives of historical and spiritual significance to their countries of origin,” he stated. “This recognition reinforces a growing international consensus that cultural restitution is not a matter of generosity, but of justice.”

The language, “prompt and unhindered”, — is significantly stronger than typical diplomatic calls for cooperation or voluntary returns. It suggests Ghana will demand action, not requests, from nations and institutions holding African cultural heritage.

What Ghana Wants

Unlike previous reparations debates that have often centered on financial compensation, Ghana’s campaign focuses on three specific pillars:

  1. Restitution — the physical return of cultural artifacts, monuments, manuscripts, and archives looted during colonial era
  2. Healing — acknowledgment, apology, and educational initiatives addressing the historical trauma of slavery
  3. Return of stolen artefacts — with particular emphasis on items of “historical and spiritual significance”

Ablakwa’s framing shifts the debate from charity to entitlement, from asking former colonial powers for aid to demanding the return of what was taken.

A Growing International Consensus

The Foreign Minister expressed confidence that the world is changing on this issue.

“This recognition reinforces a growing international consensus that cultural restitution is not a matter of generosity, but of justice,” he said, suggesting that Ghana’s coalition-building efforts are already bearing fruit.

The resolution’s passage, with support from a broad cross-section of UN member states, demonstrates that the language of reparatory justice is gaining traction beyond Africa and the Caribbean.

UNESCO Pledges Support

Edmond Moukala, country representative of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), praised President John Dramani Mahama and the African Union for promoting the resolution and pledged UNESCO’s support for good-faith dialogue.

“As we look into the painful parts of the history, there are also a lot of opportunities for collaboration and bridging the differences and moving the world forward,” Moukala said.

UNESCO’s endorsement adds institutional weight to Ghana’s campaign, potentially providing technical expertise, mediation support, and a platform for multilateral negotiations.

What Comes Next

Ablakwa urged all countries to come together to dialogue on the best mode of implementation, a clear signal that Ghana intends to lead a sustained diplomatic process, not rest on the laurels of a single resolution.

The “strong global coalition” Ghana is building will likely include:

  • African Union member states
  • Caribbean Community (CARICOM) nations
  • Supportive European countries
  • Civil society organizations focused on reparatory justice
  • Cultural institutions willing to engage in restitution dialogue

For European museums, former colonial powers, and other nations holding African artifacts, Ghana’s campaign represents a new phase of pressure.

The resolution is passed. The coalition is forming. And Ghana is making clear: implementation is not optional.

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Diasporans Petition Ghana’s President Over ‘Unpredictable, Costly, and Exclusionary’ Citizenship Process

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A coalition of diaspora organizations has submitted a sweeping petition calling for urgent reform of Ghana’s citizenship pathway, including the suspension of a newly imposed GH¢25,000 fee and the creation of permanent diaspora representation.


A coalition of Historic Diaspora organizations has submitted a formal petition to His Excellency the President of the Republic of Ghana, demanding urgent and comprehensive reform of the country’s citizenship framework for descendants of Africans displaced through the transatlantic slave trade.

The petition, published on Change.Org and addressed to President John Dramani Mahama, alleges that Ghana’s current citizenship processes have been “unpredictable, costly, poorly communicated, and lacking in meaningful representation,” contradicting the nation’s stated commitment to Pan-African leadership and reparative justice.

“We, the undersigned Historic Diasporans, Ghanaians, residents, descendants of those displaced through enslavement, and supporters of reparative justice, respectfully submit this petition to call for urgent reform,” the document states.

A Problematic 2026 Citizenship Process

The petition, supported by organizations including The Black Agenda, the African American Association of Ghana, the Ghana Caribbean Association, the Rastafari Council of Ghana, and the Marcus Mosiah Garvey Foundation, points to the 2026 citizenship process as a flashpoint for deeper structural failures.

Concerns raised include:

  • A newly imposed non-refundable GH¢25,000 citizenship application fee per person — where initially there was no fee at all
  • Late communication, with some applicants reportedly receiving as little as two days’ notice
  • Background-check requirements that many experienced as “blunt instruments of exclusion”
  • DNA and other evidentiary hurdles in a process that should be grounded in reparative justice
  • Families being affected, with some unable to proceed together

Although between 2,000 and 3,000 people expressed interest in the process, only approximately 150 completed it successfully, a figure the petitioners argue demonstrates that “the system as presently structured excludes many of the very people Ghana claims to welcome.”

Eighteen Specific Demands for Reform

The petition outlines eighteen specific demands, including:

1. Create a Historic Diaspora Citizenship and Inclusion Advisory Council with real seats at the table, where Historic Diaspora representatives are selected or elected by their own communities rather than appointed externally.

2. Establish permanent Historic Diaspora representation within government structures, with accountable, constituency-mandated representatives selected by Historic Diasporans themselves.

3. Include qualified Historic Diasporans within Diaspora Affairs and other relevant state institutions.

4. Suspend the GH¢25,000 citizenship fee immediately, pending review, and replace it with “a fair, accessible, and restorative framework.”

5. Create a family-inclusive pathway allowing spouses, children, and households to proceed together without division through cost or procedural design.

6. Integrate the history of enslavement and the Historic Diaspora into the Ghana Education Service curriculum.

7. Establish a permanent, published, year-round citizenship pathway rather than relying on “surprise announcements, ceremonial deadlines, or narrow event-driven windows.”

8. Require a mandatory minimum notice period of 90 days for any major changes in fees, requirements, or deadlines.

9. Permanently remove DNA as a blanket or default requirement, accepting alternative forms of evidence including historical, genealogical, documentary, communal, cultural, and testimonial evidence.

10. Reform police-clearance and criminal-record requirements to be individualized, transparent, and proportionate rather than blanket exclusions.

11. Establish a coordinated support framework where repatriation services take operational lead, with government providing recognition, policy backing, and institutional coordination.

12. Publish a clear appeals and review process with written reasons for denials and a fair mechanism for reconsideration.

13. Ensure multilingual and inclusive access for the full Historic Diaspora, including Latin America, the Caribbean, Francophone, and Lusophone communities.

14. Develop verified systems and safeguards for diaspora investment, relocation, and settlement, leaning on Historic Diasporan experts.

15. Encourage Historic Diaspora participation in key sectors of national development, including tourism, agriculture, education, technology, and housing.

16. Convene a formal national Town Hall within 30 days of receipt of the petition, focused on concrete policy reform rather than symbolism alone.

17. Establish a multi-stakeholder working group to guide reform and implementation.

18. Promote Pan-African education and public engagement that moves “beyond symbolism toward substantive structural change.”

‘Not a Request for Charity’

The petitioners are explicit about their intentions and their critique.

“This petition is therefore not a request for charity,” the document states. “It is a call for Ghana to align practice with principle. It is a call to move from symbolic connection to a structured, fair, transparent, and policy-driven system worthy of Ghana’s stated commitment to reparative justice and Pan-African leadership.”

The petition also challenges what it describes as the gap between rhetoric and reality. While Ghana has positioned itself as a welcoming home for descendants of those violently removed from the continent, the signatories argue that “symbolic gestures and language, including references such as a ’17th region,’ may have rhetorical value, but they are not enough.”

“We are not asking to be included from the margins,” the petitioners write. “We are calling for a structured, fair, and representative system that reflects Ghana’s own stated ideals, strengthens its global leadership, and makes citizenship, belonging, and national inclusion real in practice.”

Immediate Actions Requested

The petitioners have requested:

  • Formal acknowledgment of the petition upon receipt
  • Immediate review of the 2026 citizenship process and related diaspora policies
  • A written public response within 30 days stating what reforms will be undertaken, on what timeline, and through which institutions
  • Ongoing structured collaboration with Historic Diaspora stakeholders as reforms are developed and implemented

The petition has been copied to the Office of Diaspora Affairs, the Ministry for the Interior, Parliament’s Committee on Petitions, and the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ).

Global Implications

Ghana has long been at the forefront of African nations seeking to reconnect with the Historic Diaspora. The country’s “Year of Return” in 2019 and subsequent “Beyond the Return” initiative drew thousands of visitors and would-be repatriates from the Americas, Europe, and the Caribbean.

However, this petition — signed by a coalition of diaspora organizations with direct experience of the process — suggests that administrative frameworks have not kept pace with political rhetoric. For other African nations considering similar diaspora engagement or citizenship-by-heritage programs, Ghana’s experience offers a cautionary tale about the gap between welcoming symbolism and exclusionary practice.

The petition’s emphasis on reparative justice also situates the issue within broader global conversations about slavery reparations, historical accountability, and the rights of descendants of displaced peoples — a debate that has gained traction in Caribbean nations, the United States, and at the United Nations.

As of the publication of this story, the presidency has not issued a formal response to the petition. The petitioners have requested a written public response within 30 days.

For the approximately 150 Historic Diasporans who successfully navigated the 2026 process, citizenship has been granted.

But for the thousands more who were interested — and for the coalition now demanding systemic reform, the fight for a fair, transparent, and truly restorative pathway to belonging in Ghana is only beginning.

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Ghana Eyes Boeing Fleet for National Carrier Revival as Ambassador Smith Opens Technical Talks

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Discussions in Seattle covered fleet acquisition, maintenance partnerships, aviation training, and capacity development as Ghana seeks to position Accra as West Africa’s ‘gateway’.


Ghana’s Ambassador to the United States, H.E. Victor Emmanuel Smith, has held high-level discussions with executives at Boeing in Seattle, Washington, as part of efforts to explore strategic partnerships to revive Ghana’s national carrier — with a particular focus on securing appropriate fleet equipment.

The engagement was part of the Ambassador’s ongoing drive to deepen economic and commercial cooperation between Ghana and leading American industries, while positioning Ghana as a competitive aviation and transportation hub in West Africa.

‘We Would Appreciate a Partnership With Boeing’

During the meeting, Ambassador Smith underscored the importance of a strong and efficient national airline in supporting Ghana’s trade, tourism, investment, and connectivity ambitions under the country’s broader economic transformation agenda.

“We would appreciate a partnership with Boeing in securing appropriate equipment to ensure that the rebirth of a national carrier does not elude us,” he stated.

He stated that the re-establishment of a national airline would not only strengthen Ghana’s global connectivity but also stimulate economic activity, create jobs, and reinforce Ghana’s position as the gateway to West Africa.

Technical Talks Cover Fleet, Maintenance, and Training

The discussions explored several concrete areas of collaboration, including:

  • Fleet acquisition – securing appropriate aircraft for the revived carrier
  • Technical support – engineering and operational assistance
  • Aviation training – building local expertise and capacity
  • Maintenance partnerships – establishing or enhancing domestic maintenance capabilities
  • Broader capacity development – strengthening Ghana’s overall aviation ecosystem

These technical talks represent a significant step beyond political declarations, moving toward operational planning for a national airline that successive Ghanaian governments have attempted to launch following the collapse of Ghana Airways and later Ghana International Airlines.

Boeing Sees ‘Tremendous Potential’ in Ghana

The Boeing team welcomed the engagement and expressed optimism about the prospects of Ghana’s aviation sector. Senior Manager Rachel Peterson noted that Boeing sees significant opportunity within the Ghanaian aviation market.

“We believe the Ghanaian aviation market has tremendous potential to serve as an engine for economic growth, and we appreciate the opportunity to share how Boeing could support the development of a national carrier. We look forward to continuing the conversations we had,” Peterson said.

Her comments reflect a broader strategic interest from American aerospace manufacturers in Africa’s growing air travel demand, as the continent’s middle class expands and intra-African connectivity improves under frameworks like the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

Positioning Accra as West Africa’s Gateway

Ambassador Smith reaffirmed Ghana’s commitment to building strong partnerships with global industry leaders capable of contributing meaningfully to the country’s modernisation and infrastructure aspirations.

The push for a national carrier comes as Ghana seeks to challenge established regional aviation hubs in Lagos, Abidjan, and Dakar. Proponents argue that a well-managed, commercially viable flag carrier could:

  • Boost tourism by improving direct international connections
  • Facilitate trade through passenger and cargo capacity
  • Create thousands of direct and indirect jobs
  • Enhance Ghana’s attractiveness for foreign investment

Broader Diplomatic and Economic Push

The visit to Boeing forms part of a broader series of engagements by the Embassy of Ghana in Washington, D.C., aimed at attracting investment, strengthening strategic partnerships, and promoting Ghana’s long-term economic transformation agenda.

Earlier this week, the government formally launched a search for strategic investors to establish a new national airline, setting an ambitious timeline that could see the carrier fully operational by the first quarter of 2027. The Boeing discussions complement that investor search, with fleet acquisition being a critical component of any successful launch.

What Comes Next

While no formal agreement has been announced, the Seattle talks signal that Ghana is serious about securing the equipment and technical backing needed to revive its national carrier.

Boeing’s expressed interest suggests that the American aerospace giant views Ghana as a promising market for future growth.

Ambassador Smith has not disclosed a timeline for the next round of discussions, but his office indicated that engagement with Boeing will continue as part of Ghana’s broader aviation ambitions.

For now, the message from Seattle is clear: Ghana is open for business, and it is looking to American partners to help get its national carrier off the ground.

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