Audio By Carbonatix
President Akufo-Addo has described the deteriorating security situation in West Africa as worrying.
He warned that the entire sub-region will remain unsafe until drastic measures are instituted to consolidate and entrench democratic tenets.
The President, who also chairs the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), wants firm action to deal with military takeovers in the West African States.
“The deteriorating political situation in our region should be a matter of great concern to all of us. But, unfortunately, no current country is insulated from this occurrence in the community, and we have to take action to nip it in the bud,” he stated.
Personnel from ECOWAS and the United Nations are currently in Burkina Faso to assess the political situation there following the overthrow of the elected government last week.
According to Akufo-Addo, "the happenings in the region tell us that not everybody has accepted democracy as the preferred mode of governance.
He added that more works need to be done "to convince people that we are safer under democracy.”
“We are confronted with the setback to our democracy taking cognisance of the three coup d'état in Mali on August 18, 2020, the one in Guinea on September 5, 2021, and now on January 24, 2022, in Burkina Faso.
"Added to this is the complex security environment occasioned by terrorist attacks and pandemics presenting for us a toxic situation. Therefore, any access to power must be through a free, fair and transparent election," he said.
The development is already impacted as some 134,000 Burkina Faso nationals have crossed into Ghana seeking asylum.
ECOWAS leaders are expected to meet in Ghana on Thursday to take more drastic measures against Burkina Faso after suspension.
Meanwhile, the Director of the Faculty of Academic Affairs and Research at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC), Prof. Kwesi Aning, is predicting a couple of coup d’etats in the West African Region if the regional bloc, ECOWAS and the African Union (AU) do not urgently resolve the insecurity threats in the region.
This, he said, is a result of the trajectory of extreme violence and the toxicity in politics such as excessive corruption, unemployment, poor educational system and other underlying factors of political instability present in most West African countries.
Latest Stories
-
Cedi safe amid digital asset growth – BoG
7 minutes -
Photos: EPA busts 14 containers of illegal mining machines at Tema Port
12 minutes -
Harmonious Chorale to represent Africa in Poland and Sweden as it kicks off 20th-anniversary celebrations
13 minutes -
We can’t wait forever for AfCFTA – AGI demands alternative regional trade access
17 minutes -
The Drama of Cocoa politics: When farmers become puppets
17 minutes -
CSIR-BRRI advocates use of local materials in production to reduce cement prices
19 minutes -
Three miners killed in rock collapse at Gbane
41 minutes -
Awudome, Osu cemeteries not full — Managers
43 minutes -
Africa’s grand stage of honour: Why Ghana hosts POTY 2026
50 minutes -
Hillary Clinton accuses Trump administration of a ‘cover-up’ over its handling of Epstein documents
1 hour -
Project C.U.R.E begins 10-day assessment to support Ghana Medical Trust Fund’s NCD fight
1 hour -
Government assures public of stable ‘fugu’ prices amid Wednesday-wearing policy
1 hour -
Ghana on track for full-scale tomato production by year-end – Deputy Agric Minister
1 hour -
Danny Addo to host Undignified 1.0 event and album launch
1 hour -
Obaapanin Mary Adwoa Ohenewa Awuah
1 hour
