Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana has exceeded the United Nations’ (UN) target in the deployment of female military personnel for peacekeeping missions, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has said.
The country currently is involved in 15 peacekeeping missions globally, with a deployed strength of 2, 500 military personnel.
In respect of foreign troops, the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) had deployed 19 per cent females, exceeding the UN’s target of nine per cent, the President emphasised.
He was addressing the 2023 graduation parade of the Ghana Military Academy, in Accra.
The West African nation’s commitment to global peace and security dates back to 1960, when Ghana, for the first time, participated in a UN peacekeeping force deployed in the then Republic of Congo, now DR Congo.
Since then, the GAF has remained dedicated and committed to the cause of peace, and currently ranked ninth as the largest troop contributing country by the UN in peace support operations.
The country was admitted to the United Nations on March 8, 1957, two days after it attained independence from Britain.
At the 2023 graduation parade of the Ghana Military Academy, a total of 292 officer cadets passed out – comprising 217 males and 75 females.
“Today’s parade is a special one. The number of officers being commissioned into service is the highest in the history of the GAF,” President Nana Akufo-Addo, who is also the Commander-in-Chief, stated.
Coincidentally, the parade witnessed a joint commissioning of both regular career course cadets and short service special duty cadets, following the disruption of the Academy’s calendar due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The President said the commissioning of such a large number of officers into the Armed Forces, “at this time when resources are limited, is to put ourselves in readiness for the emerging security threats the country is facing today”.
“The security situation in West Africa, particularly in the Sahel, requires that we improve the entire security architecture of the country.
“Government is resolute on the need to institute measures that will safeguard territorial integrity and security of our nation, so as to guarantee the peace Ghana continuously enjoys in the region,” he noted.
In readiness to respond effectively to any threat from anywhere to the country’s security, the President said the Armed Forces was proportionally spread across the country.
This is to ensure the personnel maintain continuous surveillance and capability to safeguard Ghana’s territorial integrity.
In furtherance of its peacekeeping missions, the country will in December, this year, partner the UN to host a joint Peacekeeping Ministerial meeting.
The gathering of Defence Ministers and others committed to peacekeeping efforts, will focus on civilian protection, addressing misinformation and disinformation, promoting safety and security, protecting mental health, and boosting the pivotal role of women in the UN.
It will be the first to take place in Africa, and the fifth ministerial summit overall.
The flagship biennial meeting is expected to secure political support and generate pledges to strengthen UN peacekeeping in line with Action for Peacekeeping and A4P+.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana’s exit from IMF bailout programme shifts economic focus to long-term sovereign fiscal discipline
19 seconds -
Support fight against corruption—NCCE urges youth
4 minutes -
Ghana on track to exit Gavi Vaccine funding by 2030 — Mahama announces at World Health Assembly
16 minutes -
“There’s no immunity from crime” — Lom-Nuku Ahlijah clarifies limits of MP immunity in Ghana
18 minutes -
Women urged to take active role in political leadership
20 minutes -
Aid cuts could Push 5.7 million Africans into poverty by 2026 — Mahama warns at World Health Assembly
24 minutes -
PEPFAR suspension leaves 1.4m South Africans living with HIV uncertain about treatment — Mahama warns at WHA
27 minutes -
Data is the new gold — but most nations are still digging with shovels
37 minutes -
Tourism Minister pledges action on cultural infrastructure, pushes domestic tourism in Upper West
38 minutes -
“Measure success by the clinic, not the conference” — Mahama urges global health reform
45 minutes -
Charlotte Osei: Why sponsoring festivals like Oguaa Fetu Afahye is smart business
46 minutes -
“Let us not let reform be a ceiling” — Mahama calls for bold global health reforms
53 minutes -
BECE examination malpractices: Is there an end in sight?
1 hour -
We’re not in Geneva to mourn aid cuts but to build health sovereignty — Mahama at 79th World Health Assembly
1 hour -
Mahama calls for African ‘health sovereignty’ as global aid declines
1 hour