Accra, Jan. 08, - Mr Irbard
Ibrahim, an International Relations Expert, has scored the Government high on
its foreign policy decisions during its first year in office, which he believed
would impact positively on the country’s Foreign Direct Investments in the near
future.
He said the Government’s foreign
policy was manifested with the visits of many foreign dignitaries in 2017,
which included prime ministers, presidents and royal majesties culminating in
the signing of many economic agreements and Memorandum of Understanding that
would improve the economy.
He applauded the President for
taking time off his heavy schedule to visit some neighbouring countries
including Togo, La Cote d’Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Mali and Nigeria to renew the
existing bilateral relations between Ghana and those countries.
Mr. Ibrahim made the remarks in
an interview with the Ghana News Agency in Accra to express his thoughts on the
Government’s first year in office.
President Nana Addo Dankwa
Akufo-Addo and his vice Dr Mahamudu Bawumia were sworn into office on January
7, 2017 after their electoral victory in 2016 polls, and Sunday, January 7,
2018 marked exactly one year in office.
The International Relations
Expert noted that “the Ghana beyond aid” mantra was catching well with the
international community and urged the government to implement policies that
would enforce and drive that agenda so that the ordinary Ghanaian would feel
the impact.
Commenting on government’s
decision to contribute troops to The Gambia during that country’s political
upheaval, Mr Ibrahim said Ghana being a peace activist within the ECOWAS
Sub-region took the right decision to help restore peace in that country.
However, he said, the use of
force in ousting any government did not imbue confidence in the West African
Sub-region because it went contrary to the ECOWAS Charter, saying; “What if we
have the same problem in a much bigger country like La Cote d’Ivoire or Nigeria
or Ghana then there would be bloodshed”.
Mr. Ibrahim said there should
always be peaceful transition of political power from one political party to
another without the use of threat of force because in the long term it would
not serve the security interest of the Sub-region.
On Ghana supporting United
Nations resolution against the moving of the Israeli’s capital from Tel-Aviv to
Jerusalem, Mr. Ibrahim said the Israeli-Palestinian political stand-off was a
global security issue, therefore there was the need to resolve it without
resorting to militancy.
Mr Ibrahim said Ghana’s position
on the matter had always been to support a two-state solution by recognising
the State of Israel living side by side with an independent Palestinian State,
therefore anything that runs contrary to this roadmap, the Government of Ghana
would vote against it at any point in time.
Commenting on the President’s
response to gay rights, he said, the government should come again to clarify
its stand on the matter, saying; “Ghanaians would resist any overtures to
legalise homosexuality because it is against the customs and norms of the
people of Ghana”.
While applauding the government
on its foreign policy, Mr. Ibrahim chastised government for failing to exert
its authority to control political vigilantism, which was orchestrated by
members of the Invincible Forces, a group affiliated to the ruling party.
He said the inertia by government
to stamp out political vigilantism cast Ghana in the bad light on the
international community and urged the Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo led
government to use the power at its disposal to maintain law and order in the
country.
GNA

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