Audio By Carbonatix
The Aviation Ministry says it will not relent in negotiating more routes for airlines operating in the country as it strives to make Ghana an aviation hub.
Ghana currently has over 65 Bilateral Air Service Agreements (BASA) with countries in both Europe and the Americas permitting airlines to operate into these areas.
Recently at the International Civil Aviation Authority’s Air Service negotiations held in Kenya, Ghana signed agreements with Jamaica, Canada, Guyana and Seychelles all to pave way for designated Airlines from Ghana to fly into these countries
However, Director at the Ministry of Aviation, Ellis Hue Tamakloe said negotiating for more destinations will make Ghana more attractive to Airlines.
"The signing of all these Bilateral Air Service Agreements is in line with helping us achieve our vision of becoming an aviation hub within the sub-region. I must say that if you do not have enough BASA’s you cannot attract the number of Airlines you want in this country.”
He said, “So what I want to say is that we will continue to negotiate more BASA’s as long as it takes and as long as safety and security is not compromised to ensure that we become the light of Africa”.
What is Bilateral Air Service Agreements (BASA's)?
Bilateral Air Service Agreements (“BASAs”) are treaties signed between Countries to allow international commercial air transport services between territories of the signing countries. BASA’s enable movement of persons, cargo, trade and tourism via air transport.
These agreements provide the framework under which identified airlines from the two countries fly into designated ports in each other’s country.
It usually covers issues regarding traffic rights, use of intermediate routes, type of aircraft, safety standards, competition, policy on ownership, design and control of airlines, in order for both countries to benefit from the agreement, fares and tax issues.
Negotiations to enter into BASAs are usually spearheaded by the Ministry of Aviation after extensive consultation with aviation regulatory authorities and concerned institutions, and then approval from the parliament of Ghana.
Latest Stories
-
The group of X platform content creators has no political affiliation – BoG clarifies
4 minutes -
Vice President urges BECE candidates to stay confident and honest
12 minutes -
Ukrainian drone hits upmarket Moscow high-rise ahead of Victory Day celebrations
15 minutes -
‘He’s an amazing player’ – Kofi-Kyereh on playing with Thomas Partey
35 minutes -
Experts debate Bank of Ghana losses and policy impact on Super Morning Show
36 minutes -
8 teachers, invigilators convicted over 2025 BECE malpractice — Education Minister
40 minutes -
From Pulpit to Timeline: The ‘Generational Curse’ Sermon That Broke Ghana’s Internet
44 minutes -
BoG financial position raises credibility concerns ahead of IMF programme exit — Prof Bokpin
52 minutes -
DVLA records 67% revenue surge in first quarter of 2026
58 minutes -
Senyo Hosi: The BoG ‘loss’ that saved the economy
1 hour -
We remain policy solvent despite GH¢15.6bn operating loss and negative equity – BoG
1 hour -
ECOWAS clashes with Ghana over new airport taxes, warns of damage to regional aviation
1 hour -
Oppong Nkrumah urges urgent BoG recapitalisation, warns against political interference
1 hour -
DJ Mensah elevates Ghana’s music scene with PlayHouse Studio launch
1 hour -
NPP national youth wing sends best wishes to 2026 BECE candidates
2 hours