Audio By Carbonatix
The Foreign Affairs Minister is meeting with the United States Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo to review visa restrictions imposed on Ghana.
President Akufo-Addo disclosed that Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey and Ghana’s Ambassador, Dr. Barfour Adjei-Barwuah will meet to debate the issue which has been dragging for months now.
The President who disclosed this during a Q&A at the University of Chicago Institute of Politics is hopeful the talk will clear all outstanding issues to enable the lifting of the sanctions.

United States Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo
The US State Department took the decision following Ghana’s refusal to provide travel documents to over 7,000 persons, alleged to be Ghanaians, detained for various offences.
Government has said the allegations of non-cooperation by the US government over the issue leading to visa sanction on Ghana are unfounded.
According to the Foreign Affairs Ministry, it has always cooperated and engaged the US authorities in processing and removal of Ghanaians from the US.
That notwithstanding, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced the implementation of visa sanctions on Ghana.
In a release dated January 31, 2019, the DHS explained that the sanctions are as a result of Ghana’s failure to accept its nationals that have been removed from the U.S.
“Ghana has failed to live up to its obligations under international law to accept the return of its nationals ordered removed from the United States,” Secretary of Homeland Security, Kirstjen Nielsen is quoted in the release.

“The United States routinely cooperates with foreign governments in documenting and accepting U.S. citizens when asked, as appropriate, as do the majority of countries in the world, but Ghana has failed to do so in this case. We hope the Ghanaian government will work with us to reconcile these deficiencies quickly,” the Secretary of Homeland Security added.
But President Akufo-Addo said, “We think that the American administration got the wrong end of the stick and we have spent the last couple of months explaining that to them exactly what the realities are.”
“I hope that the meetings will have good news for us…we will cross our fingers and see…this is a democracy, and the more noise you make the better it is also,” he added.
Latest Stories
-
From invisible to influential : Why Africans must take personal branding seriously
10 minutes -
Police rule out visible assault in death of UCC student found on beach as investigations continue
44 minutes -
Education Minister mourns UCC student, orders full investigation into death
54 minutes -
Loud and Green : Plastic is not waste, it is an opportunity – PlasticPreneur challenges Ghana’s perception of plastic pollution
1 hour -
Loud and Green : Young climate advocate calls for a shift from single-use plastics to tackle flooding
1 hour -
Ocean Harmony Project founder warns plastic pollution is entering the human food chain through fish
2 hours -
Ghana’s floods are behavioural disasters, not natural ones – Environmental advocates
2 hours -
Nigeria clinches $10,000 grand prize as 4th ECOWAS Regional Cybersecurity Hackathon 2026 ends in Accra
4 hours -
AGI partners Danish industries to advance value chain sustainabilityÂ
4 hours -
Missing UCC student found dead as police launch investigations
4 hours -
Aflao border plunged into darkness, exposing travellers to attacks – Union Secretary
4 hours -
ECOWAS unites on minerals, industrialisation to power AfCFTA
4 hours -
Oti House of Chiefs to unveil 7-member committee on Nkwanta South conflict
4 hours -
Be advocates of modern parenting – Adaklu DCE
5 hours -
Ketu North MCE advocates agricultural mechanisation to boost productivity
5 hours