Government Addressing Border Issues With Neighbouring Countries - Akufo Addo

Government Addressing Border Issues With Neighbouring Countries - Akufo Addo

 

 

President Akufo Addo on Friday said Government was making efforts to address all outstanding border issues with country’s neighbours. He said with settlement of the maritime border issues with the Cote d’Ivoire, other disputes with Burkina Faso and Togo were also being addressed holistically to prevent an escalation of those

 

disagreements. The President disclosed this when he swore into office the 15-member board of the Ghana Boundary Commission at the Jubilee House, Accra. The board, which will superintend over the Commission’s work and also help it resolve all interstate boundary disputes, is chaired by Samuel Abu Jinapor, Minister for

 

 

Lands and Natural Resources. It also includes Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, the Minister for Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Godfred Yeboah Dame, Attorney General and the Minister for Justice, Dominic Nitiwul, Minister for Defence, Lawrence Asangongo Apaalse, a representative of the Minister of Energy and Nathaniel

 

 

Amonoo Wilson, representing the Ministry of Transport. The others are Osei Bonsu Dickson, representing the National Security Council, Mr Emmanuel Philip Owusu Boakye, the Ghana Revenue Authority, Michael Enam Dordor, Ghana Institute of Surveyors, Prof. Jerry Samuel Yaw Kuma, Ghana Institute of Geoscientists. The rest

 

 

are Dr. Bukari Ali, Minister’s Nominee, Major General Emmanuel Wekem Kotia, National Coordinator, Ghana Boundary Commission, Mr Seth Passah, representative of Ministry of Local Govt and Rural Development. The Board also has a representative from the Ministry of Transport and a representative of the Ministry of Food

 

 

and Agriculture, who is yet to be nominated. Noting that boundary disputes facilitated conflicts, President Akufo Addo tasked the board to promote regional integration and to fashion ways to demarcate, document and also protect the country’s boundary pillars, whilst adhering strictly to statutory and international boundary laws. He

 

 

said there was the need for effective border governance to help strengthen regional integration and to also quell interstate border disputes, which had serious security implications for the countries involved. The President was also happy that the Commission had facilitated boundary negotiations with Togo and had agreed on a

 

 

roadmap too for an amicable resolution of its frontier issues. Similarly, he said negotiations were ongoing to settle border issues with Burkina Faso, adding that the vast amount of resources on the country’s borders had also made it very imperative and to conclude all border misunderstandings.