
Audio By Carbonatix
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has announced plans to send government envoys to Ghana as part of efforts to deepen cooperation with other African countries in addressing social and economic challenges affecting South Africa.
According to Mr Ramaphosa, the move follows President John Dramani Mahama’s call for African countries to work together in finding solutions to challenges that transcend national borders.
In a video message, the South African leader said his government wants to move beyond seeking understanding from other countries and instead build partnerships to tackle shared problems.
“This time around we'll be saying we want to work together. Work with us, and I'm rather pleased that President Mahama of Ghana has been saying he would like to make a call on other African countries to work with South Africa,” he said.
Mr Ramaphosa explained that the planned envoys would engage Ghanaian authorities and provide details of initiatives and programmes South Africa intends to undertake.
He said the challenges facing South Africa, including migration pressures, unemployment, security concerns and service delivery gaps, require collective action from African countries.
“This is an African problem. It's not only a South African problem. We are all involved in this,” he stated.
The South African President acknowledged that the issues are complex and require cooperation between governments, citizens, and people moving across borders, whether documented or undocumented.
He stressed that African countries must work together to develop solutions rather than treating the challenges as isolated national issues.
“It's various countries on the continent that experience precisely what we are going through,” he said, adding that “this is an African problem that requires African solutions.”
The planned engagement comes amid ongoing discussions across the continent on migration, economic opportunities, unemployment and social pressures affecting many African societies.
President Mahama has previously advocated stronger cooperation among African countries to address shared challenges and promote development through collective action.
Latest Stories
-
Public Tribunals Bill addresses CSOs’ concerns, says Mahama Ayariga
2 minutes -
Menzgold customers issue 21-day ultimatum to government over GH¢5.4m locked-up funds
15 minutes -
KMA resumes demolition at Asafo Interchange after violent clash with occupants
24 minutes -
Alexander Amoafo Jnr joins Slovak Premier League side FK Železiarne Podbrezová
24 minutes -
Poultry Master Plan will provide roadmap to make Ghana self-sufficient – Dr Acquaye
43 minutes -
Nkoko Nkitinkiti needs a 10 to 20-year poultry strategy to succeed – Rockland Farms CEO
49 minutes -
HASAG demands migration of staff onto Controller and Accountant General’s payroll
56 minutes -
There is a disconnect between local and national poultry policy – Ali Muhammed
1 hour -
Cyril Ramaphosa says South Africa will send envoys to Ghana to discuss migration and social challenges
1 hour -
Nkoko Nkitinkiti introduced to cut poultry imports and boost local production – Demordzi
1 hour -
GAPFA was excluded from Feed Ghana policy formulation despite repeated requests – CEO
1 hour -
Energy Commission concludes nationwide training on energy-efficient building permits
2 hours -
Veterinary Association calls for stronger collaboration to ensure success of Nkoko Nkitinkiti Programme
2 hours -
Some Mahama ministers have been rendered redundant – Afenyo-Markin
2 hours -
Nkoko Nkitinkiti alone cannot transform poultry sector without fixing feed challenges — Farmers
2 hours