Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana's Embassy in Washington, D.C. has expressed disappointment at Lincoln University's decision to cancel an investiture event honouring President John Dramani Mahama over concerns with Ghana's anti-LGBTQ+ stance.
The event was scheduled for Thursday, with the cancellation coming at the 'eleventh hour', with the Embassy describing the timing as deeply troubling and calling for a resolution grounded in the historic ties between Ghana and the university.
In a statement issued on Tuesday, March 24, 2026, the Embassy revealed that it had received a communication from Lincoln University just hours earlier, indicating that a group within the institution had raised concerns about Mahama's perceived position on Ghana's Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill — a piece of legislation currently before Parliament.
"It is therefore both surprising and regrettable that, just hours ago, the Embassy received a communication from the University indicating that concerns had been raised by a group regarding President Mahama's perceived position on Ghana's Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, currently before Parliament," the Embassy said.
According to the Embassy, all arrangements for the March 26 visit, including the conferment of an honorary doctorate on the President, had already been fully concluded.
Embassy officials and Lincoln University representatives had conducted a joint walkthrough of the venue and finalised every logistical and programmatic detail just the previous week.
The Embassy also noted that President Mahama had already left Ghana and arrived in New York in anticipation of honouring the University's invitation when the concerns were communicated.
It also placed on record that the visit had been accepted in good faith following an official invitation from an institution with deep historical ties to Ghana, including its distinguished association with Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana's founding President and a Lincoln University alumnus.
Lincoln University subsequently posted a notice on its website cancelling the visit entirely, describing the development only as "unforeseen circumstances".
According to the University in its earlier announcement of the honour, the conferment was "in recognition of" President Mahama's "outstanding contributions to public service, democratic governance, peaceful international and inter-African relationships, and global advocacy for justice, equality, and education."
Latest Stories
-
BeTechConnected launches Future of Work Africa Podcast to amplify African voices on jobs, innovation
2 minutes -
Rejecting pesewa coins is illegal, fuels inflation – BoG warns traders
34 minutes -
New Juabeng MP seeks details on GRA’s customs AI system
36 minutes -
TaxForGalamsey: Levies were institutional, not personal – Kwakye Ofosu explains lack of sanctions
40 minutes -
Feeding Hungry Pupils: 38-year-old female teacher initiates food bank to promote teaching and learning at Abankoro
51 minutes -
Education Minister announces 2027 start date for Jomoro College project in Western Region
53 minutes -
‘Sit us down and explain ‘it’—Customs agents raise alarm over new GRA AI system
1 hour -
Gov’t commits GH¢25m seed fund to Ghana Defence University project
1 hour -
Fighters condemns PAC Chair Abena Osei-Asare over Agbana comments; renew call for inclusive politics
1 hour -
72 Days to Mundial: Ghana’s risky gamble after sacking Otto Addo
1 hour -
Health Ministry boosts cardiovascular care with new guidelines, GH¢6m equipment support
1 hour -
OmniBSIC Bank delivers 104% profit growth, assets and deposits double in 2025
2 hours -
Ghana month donation drive ends on high note as NPA donates GH₵1m to GMTF
2 hours -
Prudential Africa CEO working visit to Ghana sets pace for business excellence and agency expansion
2 hours -
Salman residents call for halt to illegal mining activities
2 hours
