Ghana News
Ghanaian Legislator Labels 1966 Coup that Ousted Kwame Nkrumah an “International Aggression” That Derailled Ghana’s Pan-African Vision
Accra, Ghana – February 25, 2026 – Marking the 60th anniversary of the February 24, 1966, military coup that ousted Ghana’s founding President Kwame Nkrumah, Ellembelle MP Emmanuel Armah Kofi Buah has described the event—codenamed Operation Cold Chop—as “an act of international aggression” rather than a domestic military takeover.
Delivering a statement in Parliament on February 24, 2026, the MP argued that the coup, which occurred while Nkrumah was on a peace mission to Hanoi amid the Vietnam War, disrupted Ghana’s trajectory toward industrial self-reliance and continental unity.
“What was termed ‘Operation Cold Chop’ was, in reality, the assassination of the African dream,” Buah declared, asserting that newly declassified international documents reveal external complicity driven by fears of Nkrumah’s Pan-African ambitions and push for economic independence.

Buah referenced recent remarks by President John Dramani Mahama during Ghana’s 68th Independence Day celebrations, which pointed to foreign involvement—echoing long-standing claims of CIA and Western support for the plotters.
Declassified U.S. State Department, National Security Council, and CIA records from the 1960s confirm U.S. awareness and discussions of plans to induce Nkrumah’s downfall as early as 1964, amid his socialist policies, anti-imperialist stance, and efforts to unite Africa against neocolonialism. While direct operational direction remains debated, historians note the coup was welcomed by Western governments, with the U.S. and U.K. engaging in covert propaganda and diplomatic maneuvers against Nkrumah’s regime.
The MP contended that Nkrumah’s “crime” was not mismanagement but his pursuit of a United States of Africa and resource control, which threatened Western interests. He lamented how the coup halted transformative initiatives, including local cocoa processing, domestic oil refining, and manufacturing expansion—foundations for a self-reliant economy.
Defending Nkrumah against revisionism, Buah reaffirmed his central role in Ghana’s independence: forming the Convention People’s Party (CPP), launching the “Self-Government Now” campaign, and mobilizing the Positive Action movement. On March 6, 1957, Nkrumah declared independence while tying Ghana’s freedom to Africa’s total liberation.
Buah highlighted enduring legacies from Nkrumah’s era, including the Akosombo Dam (powering national industries), Tema Harbour (key trade gateway), Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), and Black Star Square—deliberate tools of national transformation.
As Ghana reflects on six decades since the coup, Buah urged renewed commitment to Nkrumah’s ideals of self-reliance, Pan-African unity, and industrialization. Quoting Nkrumah—“death can never extinguish the torch”—he framed economic sovereignty as unfinished business, sparking cross-party parliamentary debate on legacy, development, and the coup’s lasting political and economic impacts.
The statement underscores ongoing national discourse about Nkrumah’s contributions versus criticisms of his one-party rule, amid calls to reclaim his vision amid contemporary challenges.
Ghana News
Ghana Ties Rice Imports to Local Production, Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital Halts Emergency Admissions, and Other Big Stories in Ghana Today
These are the most relevant and impactful stories from across Ghana today, presented as concise updates on key developments across the country.
Government to Tie Rice Imports to Local Production in Major Policy Shift
The Ghanaian government is set to introduce a significant policy linking rice import permits directly to investments in local rice production and milling facilities. This move by the Ministry of Agriculture aims to boost domestic farming, reduce the country’s growing rice import bill, and accelerate progress toward food self-sufficiency. Read the full story here
Edem Senanu Questions Procedural Lapses in Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill Process
Chairman of Advocates for Christ, Edem Senanu, has raised concerns over how Parliament’s House of Records handled the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, questioning procedural and drafting issues that emerged after its passage. Read the full story here
Sheikh Shaibu Warns Against Politicising Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill
Spokesperson for the National Chief Imam, Sheikh Aremeyaw Shaibu, has cautioned the NDC and NPP against turning the anti-LGBTQ+ bill into a political contest, stressing that Ghana already has a broad national consensus on the matter rooted in cultural and religious values. Read the full story here
Honest Ghanaian Rewarded GH¢10,000 for Returning Lost ATM Cash
Fidelity Bank has rewarded Emmanuel Appiah Boateng with GH¢10,000 for his honesty after he returned GH¢4,000 he found left behind at one of its ATMs. Read the full story here
Nigel Gaisie Files GH¢10m Defamation Suit Against Kumchacha
Prophet Nigel Gaisie has sued Prophet Nicholas Osei (Kumchacha) for GH¢10 million over alleged defamatory statements questioning his prophetic ministry. Read the full story here
680 Ghanaians to Be Evacuated from South Africa Amid Xenophobia Concerns
The Ghana High Commission in South Africa has announced plans to evacuate 680 Ghanaians (340 on June 6 and 340 on June 7, 2026) due to xenophobia-related safety issues. Read the full story here
Free SHS Suppliers to Picket at Education Ministry Over GH¢50m Debt
The National Association of Institutional Suppliers (NAIS) will picket at the Ministry of Education on June 11, 2026, over unpaid debts of approximately GH¢50 million for supplies delivered under the Free Senior High School programme since 2023. Read the full story here
Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital Halts Emergency Admissions
The Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH) in Kumasi has temporarily halted new emergency admissions after its Accident and Emergency ward exceeded capacity due to overwhelming patient numbers. Read the full story here
15 dead, 25 injured in head-on collision at Peki-Tsame
At least 15 people have been confirmed dead and 25 others injured following a devastating head-on collision between a container truck and a passenger bus at Peki-Tsame in the Volta Region. The fatal accident occurred in the early hours of Tuesday, 2 June 2026, near the premises of Peki Senior High School, prompting an emergency response from personnel of the Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS). Read the full story here
Ghana News
Today’s Newspaper Headlines: Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Wednesday, June 3, 2026. Stay informed with today’s front pages of Ghanaian newspapers, all in one place.




















Ghana News
Is the UN Losing Its Legitimacy? Ghana’s President Says Permanent Security Council Bias ‘Eats Away’ Trust
The continued exclusion of Africa from permanent seats on the United Nations Security Council is not merely a procedural flaw but a structural imbalance that is systematically eroding the credibility of the multilateral system, Ghana’s President John Dramani Mahama warned on Monday.
Speaking at Chatham House, the London-based international affairs think tank, Mahama argued that the UN’s primary decision-making body risks becoming untenable as a steward of global peace and security if it fails to reflect the demographic and political realities of the 21st century.
“This is not nearly a procedural anomaly,” Mahama said. “It is a historical injustice and a structural imbalance that undermines the credibility of the multilateral system itself.”
The president’s remarks come as the UN Security Council (UNSC) remains composed of five permanent members (P5) – the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Russia, and China – all of which were Allied powers in World War II.
Africa, home to 54 UN member states, the largest regional bloc in the organization, holds no permanent seat and only three non-permanent seats that rotate every two years.
Mahama noted that the representational gap is poised to become more pronounced as global demographics shift. According to UN population projections, Africa will account for nearly a quarter of the world’s population by 2050.
“This eats away at the trust in the system,” a senior official from the Ghanaian presidency later summarized, reinforcing Mahama’s central thesis that legitimacy in global governance requires equitable participation.
The Ghanaian leader affirmed that his government would continue to advocate for “comprehensive reform” of the UN, including permanent, veto-wielding seats for African nations.
The African Union has long pushed for a common position known as the Ezulwini Consensus, which demands at least two permanent seats for the continent, with the same powers and responsibilities as current P5 members.
However, Mahama’s critique extended beyond the Security Council. He linked the UN’s representational crisis to what he described as parallel failures in the international financial architecture. He argued that debt vulnerabilities across the Global South are not isolated fiscal challenges but structural development constraints that limit investment in health, education, infrastructure, climate adaptation, and industrial transformation.
“The international debt system must therefore become fairer, more flexible and more development-focused,” Mahama said.
He also called for reforms to global taxation frameworks, asserting that developing economies should derive equitable value from economic activity generated within their jurisdictions. A stable international order, he warned, cannot be sustained while prosperity remains structurally unequal.
To illustrate the tangible cost of such inequality, Mahama pointed to the COVID-19 pandemic. African nations, he said, discovered that access to vaccines and essential medical supplies depended not on the urgency of public health need but on their position within the global supply hierarchy. That experience, he noted, directly prompted Ghana to launch the Accra Reset Initiative – a strategic framework designed to move Africa and the Global South from dependency toward resilience, and from passive participation toward active agenda-setting in global governance.
President Mahama concluded by rejecting any characterization of Ghana as a passive observer of the changes reshaping the international order.
“We see ourselves as active participants in shaping a more balanced, equitable, and cooperative international system,” he said.
No immediate response was issued by the permanent members of the UN Security Council. Reform of the council requires an amendment to the UN Charter, which must be approved by two-thirds of the General Assembly and ratified by all five permanent members, each of whom holds a veto over their own status.
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