Arts and GH Heritage
Ghana’s Ambitious $1.2 Billion Marine Drive Project Inches Forward
What has been billed as a “world-class tourism enclave” along the capital’s coastline is slowly moving forward after years of delays, funding challenges and community concerns.
The Accra Marine Drive Project, a US $1.2 billion waterfront redevelopment initiative, is intended to transform more than 240 acres of prime beachfront property into a mixed-use commercial, cultural and leisure hub — but progress has been uneven, and uncertainty remains about when full construction will begin.

A Vision Years in the Making
Originally conceived decades ago and formally approved by Cabinet in 2016, the Marine Drive Project aims to stretch from Christiansborg Castle in Osu to the Arts Centre in the Ga Mashie enclave, reimagining Accra’s beachfront as a global-standard tourism destination. The masterplan — developed with input from world-renowned architect Sir David Adjaye — envisions a sweeping promenade linking national landmarks, a National Concert Hall, green public spaces, cultural villages, hotels, shopping centres, and other mixed-use developments designed to boost tourism, jobs and foreign direct investment.
Officials have described the scheme as the largest tourism investment project in Ghana since independence, with the potential to create thousands of jobs and elevate the country’s regional and global profile.
Yet despite the ambition, actual construction work has progressed slowly. The project has faced longstanding hurdles — from financing setbacks and land compensation disputes to misapplied funds and changing political priorities — that have stalled momentum. In 2023, the government acknowledged that the project’s accounts were depleted and that work was lagging due to funding gaps, while nearly GH¢386,296 in misused funds still had not been recovered.
Renewed Push for Accountability and Results
In mid-December 2025, Tourism Minister Abla Dzifa Gomashie inaugurated a new Board of Directors tasked with energising project implementation and restoring public confidence. Speaking at the ceremony, Minister Gomashie urged board members to deliver “timely results, accountability and transparency,” warning that the prolonged delays are no longer acceptable for what she described as a “flagship national investment.”
“The public expects results,” Gomashie said, placing the initiative at the heart of Ghana’s economic transformation strategy.
She urged board members to align closely with government priorities, safeguard value for money, and act swiftly to attract private capital and create jobs.
Deputy Tourism Minister Yussif Issaka Jajah, who chairs the new board, welcomed the directive and pledged to review existing proposals, establish a technical committee and begin early-year stakeholder engagements to reposition the project for success.
Hopes, Concerns and Community Impact
While government officials point out the economic benefits, the project has drawn criticism for its potential impact on local livelihoods and cultural heritage. Past reports warned that more than 3,000 artisans and workers at the historic Arts Centre faced displacement as the waterfront enclave was prepared for development, raising questions about how to balance modernization with community preservation.
Urban planners and civil society voices have also questioned whether the pace of work reflects Ghana’s broader needs amid fiscal pressures and competing development priorities, or if the project risks becoming symbolic rather than substantive. Still, proponents argue that the Marine Drive could catalyze broader coastal regeneration and enhance Ghana’s appeal as an international destination.
A Global Ambition with Local Stakes
The Marine Drive is not just a domestic endeavour — it sits at the intersection of urban planning, tourism competitiveness and global investment flows. By linking Accra’s historic core with world-class waterfront amenities, the project’s success could signal Ghana’s readiness to lead in high-value tourism infrastructure in West Africa.
Critically, the renewed focus from the Ministry and the new board’s mandate for accountability reflect broader efforts within government to overcome bureaucratic hurdles and align flagship projects with tangible outcomes for citizens and investors alike.
As 2026 unfolds and with a new board in place, the world will be watching closely to see whether Accra’s Marine Drive can finally match its grand vision with grounded progress — and whether its long-awaited transformation of Ghana’s coastline will at last become reality.
Arts and GH Heritage
The Sound of Stillness: How South African Dance Set Abidjan Ablaze
When the curtains rose at the Salle Lougah François in Abidjan’s Palais de la Culture, it wasn’t just the stage lights that commanded attention—it was the weight of a collective breath.
In the dual performance of ZO! Mute, South African choreographic titans Vincent Sekwati Mantsoe and Gregory Maqoma didn’t just stage a dance; they conducted a spiritual excavation.
The evening felt like a masterclass in the economy of energy. Mantsoe’s ZO! channeled the mythic spirit of Queen ZO, a figure of terrifying duality.

Six dancers, cloaked in arresting red, moved through a landscape where street dance collided with ancestral ritual. Here, the body was an instrument of both grace and destruction.
The “physicality” wasn’t merely athletic; it was a rhythmic conversation where body percussion replaced orchestral swells, grounding the performance in the grit of urban life and the sanctity of tradition.
However, the true brilliance emerged in the transition to Maqoma’s Mute. If ZO! was the storm, Mute was the deliberate, ringing silence that follows.
Maqoma challenged the audience to find meaning in absence. By leaning into minimalism, every twitch of a finger or tilt of a head carried the weight of a spoken manifesto.
It raised a poignant question for any modern African audience: in a world filled with the noise of greed and despair, can silence be our most potent form of agency?
As the dancers shifted from chaos to contemplation, ZO! Mute became a metaphor for the continent itself—navigating the fragile line between power and collapse, while stubbornly searching for renewal amidst the decay.
Arts and GH Heritage
The Body is the Map: Decolonizing the Female Identity through Contemporary Dance
At the 2026 Market for African Performing Arts (MASA) in Abidjan, the air inside the Salle Kodjo Ebouclé usually hums with the kinetic energy of West Africa’s most ambitious ensembles.
But when Mozambican dancer Mai-Júli Machado took the stage for her solo piece, Amelle, the roar of the Palais de la Culture dissolved into a heavy, expectant silence.
Machado began the piece topless—a choice that, in many contemporary African contexts, remains a radical reclamation of the female form from the male gaze.
In Amelle, the skin is not a spectacle; it is a parchment. As she moved, her body became a vessel of memory, tracing the jagged line between girlhood and womanhood.
What makes Amelle a vital contribution to the continental dialogue is its refusal to shout. In a world of loud political manifestos, Machado’s “ritual of transmission” suggests that the most profound resistances occur in the quiet, invisible shifts of the psyche.

Her choreography oscillates between agonizing restraint and explosive release—a physical manifestation of the cultural and social “corsets” that attempt to define African female identity.
For a global audience, Machado’s work serves as a reminder that the African body is not just a site of rhythm or labor, but a living archive.
Every deliberate pause and every urgent expansion against “unseen forces” mirrors the resilience required to navigate traditional expectations while carving out a modern self.
Amelle is more than a dance; it is an intimate testimony to the complexity of becoming in a world that often demands women remain still.
Arts and GH Heritage
Ethiopian Dancer Elsa Mulder Explores Identity and Adoption in Powerful Performance ‘Unravel’
A quiet stage, a single performer, and the slow rhythm of memory were enough to hold an entire audience spellbound during a recent performance at the Palais de la Culture, where Ethiopian dancer Elsa “Zema” Mulder presented her deeply personal contemporary dance work Unravel.
The performance formed part of the Market for African Performing Arts, an international gathering that brings artists, producers, and cultural leaders together to spotlight the continent’s evolving stage productions.
Inside the venue’s Salle Kojo Ebouclé, Mulder delivered a restrained yet emotionally charged piece exploring identity, memory, and the complex realities of international adoption.
Conceived and performed by Mulder, Unravel draws inspiration from the Ethiopian Buna coffee ceremony, a communal ritual that traditionally symbolises hospitality and social connection.
In Mulder’s choreography, the ceremony becomes something more symbolic: a thread connecting past and present, homeland and distance, memory and absence.
From the opening moments, the performance adopts an almost ritualistic pace. Mulder’s movements are slow, precise, and deliberately controlled, inviting the audience into an intimate emotional space rather than overwhelming them with spectacle.

Long pauses and measured gestures suggest both longing and reflection, allowing the themes of displacement and belonging to surface gradually.
The work’s emotional depth is heightened by the original musical score composed by Cheikh Ibrahim Thiam, whose soundscape blends layered textures with sparse, fragile notes. The music shifts between subtle rhythmic patterns and near silence, echoing the performer’s physical journey through fragments of memory and identity.
Together, the choreography and music build a multidimensional narrative that avoids easy explanations. Rather than presenting adoption as a simple story of loss or rescue, Mulder approaches the subject through the body’s memory—how experiences of separation and relocation linger long after childhood.
The performance also resists conventional storytelling. Instead of a clear beginning, middle and end, Unravel unfolds through symbolic gestures and emotional fragments. The dancer’s body becomes the site where absence, history, and identity intersect.
At times, the work’s quiet introspection challenges viewers unfamiliar with the cultural references woven into the performance. Yet the sincerity of Mulder’s delivery keeps the audience engaged, revealing moments of vulnerability that resonate across cultures.
For festivals like the Market for African Performing Arts, works such as Unravel demonstrate the growing global reach of African contemporary dance. Artists across the continent are increasingly using performance to explore themes of migration, heritage and identity—subjects that connect deeply with modern audiences.
By the end of the performance, the stage remains quiet, but the questions linger: What does it mean to belong to a place one barely remembers? And how does identity evolve when memory itself feels incomplete?
Mulder offers no simple answers. Instead, Unravel invites viewers to sit with the tension between loss and reconstruction—an experience that continues long after the final movement fades.
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