
Audio By Carbonatix
President John Mahama has reaffirmed Ghana’s commitment to ongoing dialogue between the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the three Sahelian countries that recently withdrew from the regional bloc to form the Alliance of Sahel States (AES).
Speaking at the Jubilee House after receiving the new German Ambassador to Ghana, Frederick Landshoft, President Mahama warned that the growing threat of terrorism in the Sahel poses a danger to the entire West African sub-region if not addressed collectively.
“The AES countries, which are our Sahelian neighbours, have broken away from ECOWAS. We are engaging in continuous dialogue with them because we realise that the difficulty they face is not theirs alone. If we do not solidarise, it could spread over the whole of the sub-region,” he said.
President Mahama stressed the importance of regional and global cooperation in addressing violent extremism and praised Germany for its longstanding partnership with Ghana, particularly through support for the Kofi Annan International Peace Training Centre.
He noted that Germany’s collaboration in training peacekeepers and strategic thinkers had been invaluable and called for deeper cooperation in technical support, training, and joint exercises to strengthen regional security.
The President also reflected on the changing global order, emphasising the need for countries that value multilateralism to work closely together.
“Relations between countries are becoming more transactional, and it looks like the multilateral order is being upended. But Germany is a strong believer in multilateralism, just as Ghana is. This is a time for us to come even closer together,” he said.
President Mahama also highlighted the strong bilateral ties between Ghana and Germany, citing Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s visit to Ghana in 2023 as a high point in relations between the two nations.
Ambassador Landshoft, on his part, commended President Mahama’s leadership and reform agenda, describing Ghana as a reliable partner with shared values on democracy, multilateralism, and economic development.
“This year, we celebrate 50 years of economic cooperation. At the United Nations, we not only sit next to each other but also vote for the same resolutions most of the time.
"We are happy to have a partner like Ghana, where we can build on this shared foundation,” the ambassador said.
The courtesy call forms part of efforts to deepen Ghana-Germany relations in security, economic cooperation, and multilateral diplomacy at a time of growing regional security challenges.
Latest Stories
-
Ghanaian’s death not connected to anti-immigration protests — Leader of Concerned Ghanaians in South Africa
5 minutes -
Conflicting reports on Ghanaian’s death in South Africa disturbing — Jinapor
15 minutes -
Ryanair warns of ‘queue chaos’ from new EU border system
18 minutes -
Akatsi South MCE calls for more support as 13 schools receive dual desks
19 minutes -
Ghana Sports Fund boss courts global support for youth sports development
22 minutes -
China says pilot crashed small plane into skyscraper for ‘personal reasons’
33 minutes -
Police intercept 50,000 rounds of ammunition in Upper West, arrest three suspects
35 minutes -
Vatican excommunicates hundreds of thousands of splinter sect followers
36 minutes -
Access Plus Communications launches ‘Eye Focus App’ to broaden reach of AI-powered vision screening
37 minutes -
Asiedu Nketiah urges African leaders to match economic rhetoric with action
39 minutes -
24-Hour Economy Authority and Petrochemical Holdings GmbH partner to establish 2 projects in Ghana
43 minutes -
Accra Floods: Greater Accra Minister directs MMDCEs to ensure fair distribution of relief items
47 minutes -
Ghana must balance Climate Action with Energy Security – Experts urge
51 minutes -
Boycotting South African goods not the solution to xenophobic attacks — Prof Antwi-Danso
51 minutes -
Discipline must build unity, not endanger victory
59 minutes