Audio By Carbonatix
The Minority Caucus on the Foreign Affairs Committee of Parliament has strongly criticised the government over an alleged agreement with the United States for Ghana to serve as a receiving point for West African nationals deported from America.
Reports indicate that 14 such deportees have already been admitted into the country under the arrangement.
In a statement signed by Ranking Member on the Committee, Samuel A. Jinapor, the Minority described the move as a “grave constitutional breach” and a direct affront to Ghana’s sovereignty and foreign policy.
“Article 75 of our Constitution is clear that any treaty, agreement, or convention executed by or under the authority of the President must be laid before Parliament and ratified. It is surprising that this government has chosen to ignore this constitutional requirement,” Mr Jinapor stated.
The caucus drew parallels with the controversial 2016 case in which the Mahama administration admitted two Yemeni terror suspects from Guantanamo Bay without parliamentary approval, a decision later ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.
“Beyond this blatant constitutional breach, the agreement raises pressing concerns of sovereignty, security, and policy,” the Minority warned.
They further argued that the arrangement risks undermining Ghana’s long-standing foreign policy principles.
“Ghana has built a proud reputation for principled diplomacy rooted in non-alignment, regional solidarity, and respect for human rights. To associate Ghana with the United States’ harsh immigration enforcement regime could damage our international standing,” the statement read.
The Minority called for the immediate suspension of the agreement until it has been laid before Parliament for ratification.
“We demand that government provides full clarity on when this agreement was reached, the safeguards in place, and the broader implications of receiving these deportees. No future agreements of this nature must ever be implemented without prior parliamentary approval,” Mr Jinapor insisted.
Latest Stories
-
AFCON 2025: Senegal beat Morocco to win second title
2 hours -
Sports journalist Alex Kobina Stonne elected UniMAC External Affairs Commissioner
2 hours -
NDC’s economic gains ‘cosmetic’; real impact yet to be felt – Bryan Acheampong
2 hours -
WEF warns geoeconomic confrontation now world’s biggest threat
3 hours -
Top 10 safest countries in Africa for travellers in 2026: Ghana places 7th
4 hours -
Inflation to remain within lower bound of medium-term target of 8 ± 2% – BoG
4 hours -
Bright Simons: Ghana’s budget should follow gold, not oil
4 hours -
Stress test on restructured government bonds: Banks appear resilient to shocks – BoG
4 hours -
T-bills auction: Investor interest continued to surge, but interest rates soar
4 hours -
2025/26 Ghana League: Holy Stars edge Bechem United to secure vital home victory
6 hours -
Gun amnesty programme extended by two weeks
6 hours -
Tano North farmers threaten demonstration against Newmont ‘unfair compensation’
6 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Richmond Opoku brace sees Young Apostles draw with Hohoe United
6 hours -
Over 75% of NPP Parliamentary candidates outpolled Bawumia in 2024 – Bryan Acheampong
7 hours -
Kyebi Zongo to become a model for excellence, environmental stewardship – Chief of Kyebi Zongo
7 hours
