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UPSA Courts GRA Partnership as Diamond Jubilee Countdown Begins

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A delegation from the University of Professional Studies, Accra (UPSA) called on the leadership of the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) on Monday, February 16, extending a formal invitation to the tax authority as part of a widening stakeholder mobilisation drive ahead of the institution’s 60th anniversary celebrations.

The delegation was led by Kwabena Agyekum, Chairman of the UPSA 60th Anniversary Planning Committee and Chief Executive Officer of the Chartered Institute of Marketing, Ghana (CIMG). He congratulated Commissioner-General Anthony Kwasi Sarpong and Dr. Martin Kolbil Yambrigya on their recent appointments, commending the Authority’s work and noting the growing footprint of UPSA graduates within national institutions.

Agyekum also proposed a collaborative visibility event, an “Evening with the Commissioner-General,” to be hosted on the UPSA campus, describing it as a platform that could deepen stakeholder participation in the milestone celebrations while spotlighting the Authority’s ties to the university.

Francis Dadzie, Vice Chairman of the Planning Committee and President of the UPSA Global Alumni Association, outlined the anniversary calendar. Highlights include the relaunch of the Institute of Professional Studies (IPS) on March 17, 2026, a high-level Ghana Business Leaders’ Conclave on May 15, 2026, to be hosted by the Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, and a Hackathon and Artificial Intelligence (AI) Innovation Session designed to showcase student ingenuity.

Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, a distinguished UPSA alumnus, formally accepted an invitation to participate in the anniversary events during a courtesy call at Manhyia Palace on January 30, 2026. The Asantehene commended the university’s transformation from the Institute of Professional Studies into a fully accredited public university.

Dr. Yambrigya, himself a UPSA alumnus serving as Commissioner for Domestic Tax Revenue, welcomed the delegation warmly. He pledged to serve as an anniversary ambassador within the GRA and committed to mobilising the UPSA alumni network at the Authority and exploring co-branding and sponsorship opportunities aligned with the Authority’s ongoing programmes.

As a gesture of goodwill, the Planning Committee presented the GRA with the UPSA@60 Anniversary Plan Document and commemorative souvenirs.

UPSA’s year-long celebrations, running from August 2025 through June 2026, are anchored on the theme “Six Decades of Transformative Education: Empowering Africa’s Future Business Leaders.” The institution was founded in 1965 with five students in a rented Madina property and has since grown into Ghana’s only public professional university.

Labour Seeks Urgent Talks With COCOBOD as Sector Faces Deep Crisis

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Organised Labour is preparing to hold urgent discussions with the government and the management of the Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) within the next two weeks, as the cocoa sector grapples with one of its most severe financial crises in recent memory.

Labour leaders say the planned meeting will focus on pressing concerns including proposals to restructure COCOBOD’s salary framework and explore measures to shore up the Board’s deteriorating financial position. The engagement is being driven by growing anxiety among workers over the sector’s direction following a series of damaging disclosures in recent weeks.

The talks come days after COCOBOD itself moved to signal shared sacrifice at the top. COCOBOD Chief Executive Dr. Randy Abbey confirmed that executive management took a 20 percent pay cut while senior staff accepted a 10 percent salary reduction, effective Monday, February 16, 2026, for the remainder of the 2025/2026 crop year. The reductions form part of broader cost-containment efforts including procurement reforms and a staff rationalisation exercise.

The depth of the crisis became clearer when Finance Minister Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson addressed a press conference on February 12. He announced that the government would reduce the producer price of cocoa beans to GH¢2,587 per bag, down from the GH¢3,625 per bag promised in 2025, citing a global price collapse of nearly 70 percent from the commodity’s late-2024 peak. To cushion farmers, the government said they would receive 90 percent of the gross Free On Board (FOB) price, surpassing the standard 70 percent minimum threshold.

The scale of COCOBOD’s financial exposure has alarmed stakeholders. President John Mahama has directed the Attorney-General to conduct a criminal investigation and forensic audit into COCOBOD’s operations over the past eight years, as the Board contends with outstanding debt of approximately GH¢32 billion.

Global market conditions have offered no relief. Cocoa prices fell below $4,000 per metric ton on February 10, 2026, extending a month-to-date loss of over 10 percent and compounding the damage from January’s 29 percent decline. Analysts warn further pressure lies ahead, with commodity research firm StoneX projecting a global cocoa surplus of 287,000 metric tons in the 2025/2026 season.

With workers’ livelihoods directly in the crosshairs of the restructuring agenda, Organised Labour’s push for dialogue is seen as a critical step toward ensuring any further austerity measures are negotiated rather than imposed.

Black Stars Book Mexico Friendly as World Cup Countdown Intensifies

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Ghana’s senior national football team, the Black Stars, will face Mexico in an international friendly on Friday, May 22, 2026, at a venue in Mexico yet to be confirmed, as both sides ramp up preparations for the 2026 FIFA World Cup (FIFA World Cup).

The fixture has been officially confirmed by the Ghana Football Association (GFA), which announced the match as part of Ghana’s broader build-up to the global tournament co-hosted by Mexico, Canada, and the United States.

Ghana’s squad will be drawn from players in the domestic league and European competitions, all under the watch of head coach Otto Addo, along with selected Under-23 (U-23) players preparing for the Olympic Games qualifiers. The match will take place days before Ghana takes on two other unnamed opponents as part of a broader pre-tournament schedule.

With the Mexico fixture confirmed, Ghana now has three warm-up matches lined up ahead of the World Cup, following earlier announcements of friendlies against Austria and Germany during the March FIFA International window. Addo and his technical staff are expected to announce their squad for the European ties in the coming days.

The May encounter carries added strategic significance. Facing one of the tournament’s host nations gives the Black Stars exposure to a team well-acquainted with North American conditions, and the tactical challenge mirrors Ghana’s early group-stage opposition. The fixture is also viewed as a dress rehearsal ahead of Ghana’s Group L opener against Panama on June 17 in Toronto, given Panama’s similar regional playing style to Mexico.

Ghana and Mexico last met in a friendly in 2023 in the United States, where the Black Stars fell to a 2-0 defeat. Addo will be targeting a stronger performance as his side seeks to advance beyond the group stage for the first time since the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa.

Russia Pledges Help as Envoy Fails to Verify Suspect’s Nationality

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Ghana’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has confirmed that the Russian Ambassador to Ghana, His Excellency Sergei Berdnikov, has pledged cooperation in the pursuit of justice over the unlawful recording and online distribution of sexually explicit images involving Ghanaian women, even as questions about the suspect’s true identity remain unresolved.

The Ambassador was summoned on the instruction of Foreign Affairs Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa in connection with a man who identifies himself as Yaytseslav and claims Russian nationality. The man became a trending topic in Ghana after videos of his interactions with several Ghanaian women surfaced online on February 12, 2026. In a press release dated February 17, the Ministry disclosed that Ambassador Berdnikov was unable to confirm whether the suspect holds Russian nationality, adding a layer of uncertainty to the diplomatic proceedings.

Ghana’s Minister of Communications, Digital Technology and Innovations, Samuel Nartey George, stated that authorities have already initiated processes to bring the man to justice, warning that the suspect violated Ghanaian law and would face prosecution whether in the country or in absentia.

The suspect reportedly operated by approaching women around the Accra Mall area, recording interactions using body cameras and smart glasses, with extended footage made available on a private Telegram channel at a subscription fee. The Cyber Security Authority (CSA Ghana) condemned the conduct as a violation of Ghana’s laws on cyber and privacy-related offences, and warned that members of the public who reshare the videos also risk prosecution under Ghana’s cybersecurity laws, with penalties ranging from one to three years imprisonment.

Ghana has indicated its intention to seek the extradition of the suspect. However, the Ambassador’s inability to confirm the man’s nationality complicates that path, as any extradition request would depend on establishing verified citizenship.

The case has triggered widespread public outrage and calls for tighter scrutiny of foreign nationals entering the country.

LaRussell Calls Ownership the Most Revolutionary Act in Hip-Hop

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Vallejo, California independent rapper LaRussell sat down with Boardroom Talks to deliver a candid, wide-ranging conversation on music ownership, distribution, the creative limits of modern hip-hop, and why he sees himself working with Jay-Z one day.

LaRussell, who owns all of his music and intellectual property through Good Compenny, his label and creative company, has released over 40 albums since 2018 and amassed more than 100 million global streams, all without signing to a major label. In the interview, he spoke with the kind of conviction that has made him one of the most talked-about independent voices in the genre.

On the difference between TikTok success and radio success, LaRussell was blunt. “The barometer is far lower. To be successful on TikTok, you got to do far less and spin far less than it takes to be successful as a radio act,” he said. He extended that critique to hip-hop broadly, arguing the genre has stagnated compared to other disciplines. “Rap music as a whole, but specifically hip-hop, has not evolved as much as we’ve seen other crafts like the National Basketball Association (NBA). We’ve seen the evolution. We’ve seen Steph Curry do things that we never seen anyone do prior,” he said.

On Jay-Z’s push into music ownership through Tidal and beyond, LaRussell was philosophical. “Do you think it’s revolutionary when a black man enters a situation that we have no presence in and no ownership in? That’s a very revolutionary act whether you late or not, because nobody else going to do it,” he said. When asked whether he and Jay-Z might collaborate one day, his answer was brief and certain: “For certain.”

LaRussell credited the late Nipsey Hussle as the inspiration behind his now-well-known pay-what-you-want album model. “Nipsey did the hundred dollar album. I didn’t think people was going to give me a hundred for an album, so I was like, I’m going to just let you pay whatever you want,” he explained. The model has since helped him generate millions of dollars from music.

He also collaborates with fans directly, doing features on their original tracks as a form of giving back. He described one moment at a recent show where a fan pulled out his phone to reveal a song they had recorded together had reached 90,000 streams. “That’s his first time ever getting that many streams and he felt so proud. That’s my way of giving back,” LaRussell said.

LaRussell has no manager or agent and handles deals himself, believing no one can speak for his vision the way he can. On his collaboration with veteran producer Lil Jon, he said the experience reinforced something essential. “He taught me to not let the spirit die. Lil Jon is 20 years older than me and he was just one of us in the studio. His spirit is still there. He still loves what he does and he cares,” LaRussell said.

From Mamprobi Streets to Champions League Dreams

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Samuel Baabu Aryee, a 20-year-old right back currently at Port City Football Club (FC), is quietly emerging as one of Ghana’s most promising young defenders, with Champions League ambitions burning inside him.

The Accra-born player cut his teeth in the cradle of Ghanaian football, starting at Barca Kids FC in Mamprobi, a community in the capital long celebrated for producing elite talent. The area famously shaped the early career of Black Stars legend Asamoah Gyan, who played colts football there before rising to become Ghana’s all-time leading scorer.

Aryee’s own journey took him through Charity FC, Sporting FC, Best IV FC and Truelife FC before he settled at Port City FC, building the foundations of what could become a decorated career.

What sets the youngster apart is his rare ability with both feet and an attacking instinct that stretches defensive lines. His combination of pace, stamina and strength allows him to overlap with devastating effect, creating problems at both ends of the pitch. Teammates and coaches have nicknamed him Arnold, a nod to Real Madrid’s English defender Trent Alexander-Arnold, a comparison he wears with pride.

His ambition is clear. A move to a Ghana Premier League (GPL) club or a European league is the immediate target, with the Premier League, Bundesliga, Serie A and the UEFA Champions League representing his ultimate dream.

Aryee is also firmly focused on the Black Stars. Ghana have qualified for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, to be co-hosted by the United States of America (USA), Mexico and Canada, and he believes the squad will shine on that global stage, a stage he intends to reach himself.

“It is my job so I have to be serious,” he told this reporter, a statement that neatly captures the attitude driving his ascent.

Angola Official Host Country, ITB Berlin 2026: The Next Tourism Hub In Africa?

In recent years, Angola, a country rich in natural beauty, cultural depth, and untapped adventures has begun to emerge as one of Africa’s most exciting tourism destinations. Its official role as host country of ITB Berlin 2026 has now propelled this transformation onto the world stage, signalling a new era in African travel and international tourism partnerships. 

A Powerful Global Platform 

For the first time in its history, Angola has partnered with the world’s leading travel trade event to serve as the official host country for ITB Berlin 2026 – marking a major milestone for the nation’s tourism sector. This collaboration will take place from March 3–5, 2026, during the show’s 60th anniversary, where Angola will showcase its attractions, culture and investment opportunities to tens of thousands of global travel professionals. 

Under the strategic brand identity “Visit Angola – The Rhythm of Life,” the country aims to redefine its image internationally, inviting travellers to experience its vibrant culture, diverse landscapes and welcoming people in deeply memorable ways. 

From Hidden Gem to Global Stage 

Angola has long flown under the tourism radar, largely because of past decades of civil unrest and limited infrastructure. Today, however, a rapid transformation is underway. The partnership with ITB Berlin serves as a powerful endorsement of the country’s tourism potential and marks a significant step toward wider global recognition. 

The tourism ministry’s goal in Berlin is twofold: 

  • To attract international travellers who are eager for new and authentic experiences. 
  • To draw foreign investment into travel infrastructure, hospitality and leisure sectors, helping position Angola as a top destination in Africa. 

A Land of Breathtaking Diversity 

Angola’s tourism appeal lies in its incredible variety: 

  • Natural wonders like Calandula Falls: Among Africa’s most spectacular waterfalls and the expansive Namibe Desert offer dramatic scenic beauty. 
  • Pristine beaches along the Atlantic Ocean stretch for miles, perfect for relaxation and exploration. 
  • Wildlife and ecology in national parks like Kissama allow for unforgettable safari experiences. 
  • Cultural richness: From traditional dance and music to culinary specialties, provides a sensory feast for visitors. 

The capital, Luanda, embodies this diversity beautifully with modern urban energy, historical sites, dynamic nightlife and culinary delights that blend Portuguese and African flavours. 

Economic and Strategic Growth 

Tourism is quickly becoming a key pillar in Angola’s economic diversification strategy. Recent reports by ATTA Travels show significant growth in international arrivals and rising investment in hospitality and convention infrastructure. This aligns with broader continental trends where Africa continues to gain popularity among global travellers. 

According to itb.com, hosting ITB Berlin 2026 places Angola at the heart of a global tourism conversation, offering unmatched visibility to tour operators, investors and government leaders from around the world. It also symbolises a shift where lesser-known African destinations are taking centre stage and influencing travel trends. 

A Future Destination for Global Travellers Today, Angola stands on the brink of becoming Africa’s next great tourism hub. The country’s participation as the main partner for ITB Berlin 2026 isn’t just a one-off showcase, it represents a turning point in how the world perceives travel to Africa. Through strategic branding, international engagement and commitment to sustainable growth, Angola is ready to welcome the world not just as a destination, but as an experience. 

In the words of the country’s tourism leaders: “We invite the international travel industry to experience the rhythm of Angola with all their senses.” I cannot wait to witness Angola and other African countries at ITB 2026 from the 3rd to 5th of March. If you are going to be at ITB Berlin 2026 let’s connect, network and share.

Emmanuel Frimpong is a Tourism Consultant, Analyst, President, Africa Tourism Research Network Vice, President, Africa Medical Tourism Council and CEO of Pishon Consult. Email: [email protected] Tel. No. +233261128507 (WhatsApp)

Stellantis to Unveil Full 2025 Numbers as Recovery Signs Build

Stellantis N.V., the global automaker behind brands including Jeep, Peugeot, Fiat, and Maserati, has confirmed February 26, 2026, as the date it will release its Full Year 2025 financial results, with investors and analysts watching closely after a series of positive fourth-quarter signals raised hopes that a difficult 2024 is firmly in the rear-view mirror.

The company announced on Monday, February 16, 2026, that a live audio webcast and conference call accompanying the results will take place on Thursday, February 26, at 2:00 p.m. Central European Time (CET) or 8:00 a.m. Eastern Standard Time (EST), with the related press release and presentation materials expected to be published on its investor website at approximately 8:00 a.m. CET. A recorded replay will be made available for those unable to join the live session.

The announcement follows an encouraging set of preliminary shipment figures. Stellantis reported estimated consolidated shipments of 1.5 million vehicles for the fourth quarter of 2025, a 9 percent increase year on year, driven primarily by a 43 percent surge in North American shipments as the company benefited from normalised inventory dynamics and a strong product refresh cycle across Jeep, Ram, and Dodge. The Middle East and Africa region also recorded modest growth of 2 percent year on year, supported by expansions in Algeria and Morocco.

Following the preliminary results, Freedom Capital analyst Dmitriy Pozdnyakov upgraded Stellantis to Buy from Hold, citing sequential delivery growth and anticipating a United States sales recovery and market share gains, though he modestly reduced his 2026 to 2027 earnings forecasts to reflect softer-than-expected electric vehicle (EV) demand. Morgan Stanley kept an Equal Weight rating on the stock with a revised price target of seven euros.

The Full Year 2025 results will be followed by Stellantis’ Annual General Meeting on April 14, 2026, its Q1 2026 financial results on April 30, and its 2026 Investor Day scheduled for May 21.

Stellantis N.V. is listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) under the ticker STLA, on Euronext Milan under STLAM, and on Euronext Paris under STLAP. Full investor access details are available at stellantis.com under the Investors section.

Inside the World of Russian Creator Vyacheslav

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In an age where digital storytellers carve identities as fast as their clips go viral, Vyacheslav Trahov often stylised as Yaitseslav, Yatseslav or Yaitseslav Shurupov presents a distinctive case study in personal branding and social engagement content.

Describing himself as the creator of the YouTube channel “Yatseslav: Meeting Women 40+,” Trahov has spent more than 15 years refining what he calls the “art of seduction.” Unlike traditional lifestyle influencers who focus on travel, fashion or gaming, Trahov’s niche lies in documenting real‑life interpersonal interactions, particularly those unfolding spontaneously in public settings.

Trahov’s public persona is built on the premise that authentic social rapport matters more than scripted or staged moments. His narrative emphasizes skills in communication and conversational depth, aiming to showcase how individuals from different backgrounds connect in unfiltered environments.

His self‑description contrasts sharply with traditional romantic or dating content that often revolves around material incentives or staged scenarios. Instead, Trahov emphasizes psychological and social dynamics, presenting personal interaction as a craft honed through years of real‑world practice.

This narrative has helped him differentiate his brand in a crowded digital ecosystem where many influencers chase attention through shorts, challenges or reactive content. Trahov’s emphasis on interpersonal nuance signals an ambition to create a genre of experiential engagement videos rather than purely scripted entertainment.

Inside The World Of Russian Creator Yatseslav - Books
Inside The World Of Russian Creator Yatseslav – Books

Trahov’s digital footprint spans several well‑known platforms. Edited highlights of his encounters are regularly shared on YouTube and TikTok, where he can reach wide audiences through short‑form videos and curated clips. These public platforms serve as his primary visibility vehicles, helping him attract followers who enjoy unscripted social media content.

His self-published book, “How to Meet and Sleep with a Woman Spending from 0 to 500 Rubles,” is currently listed for 250 rubles on Russian websites.

Complementing his free public content is a private subscription channel on Telegram. Information available to NetbuzzAfrica.com analyses show that on paid channels like Telegram, creators typically offer extended or exclusive content behind a modest monthly fee, in Yatseslav’s case reportedly around the 400 – 1000 rubles, roughly 5-13 dollars per month.

This hybrid model, free public engagement paired with premium access is a common monetization strategy used by many digital creators seeking both broad visibility and sustainable revenue streams. It allows creators to build a large, engaged audience while providing deeper, more detailed content for paying subscribers.

Yatseslav’s emphasis on real interactions and rejection of superficial dating norms reflects a consistent theme in his online narrative: efficiency and authenticity over spectacle. This personal philosophy appears embedded in the way he frames his content and engages with audiences on different platforms.

While specific details about his early life or offline pursuits remain sparse in public sources, his long‑term commitment to studying social interaction techniques suggests a blend of curiosity and performance instinct characteristic of modern digital personalities. His website underscores this by noting his deliberate shift away from conventional courtship methods toward what he calls natural social dynamics.

Russian Tourist Yaytseslav Under Fire For Secretly Recording Women - Blurred
Russian Tourist Yaytseslav Under Fire For Secretly Recording Women – Blurred

Exact audience figures haven’t been publicly confirmed, but the viral spread of clips linked to Yatseslav across Africa and beyond suggests his content has drawn attention across multiple regions. His Telegram channel has over 40,580 members, with around 2,000 active users online at any given time.

Clips from his encounters in countries like Ghana and Kenya have resurfaced on social media timelines, suggesting that his videos resonate beyond his core audience and engage broader online communities.

This pattern points to a digital influence that is both niche in focus and expansive in reach, the hallmark of many modern social media creators who leverage authentic human interaction as their content driver.

Despite his visibility on major platforms, there is no public evidence suggesting Yatseslav is affiliated with mainstream media, influencer networks or structured syndicates. His operation appears largely independent and self‑directed, rooted in his personal brand and unique approach to social documentation.

Even his Telegram private channels and online presence seem centered around individual community engagement rather than institutional backers or production houses. This autonomy offers flexibility but also places the onus of content strategy, audience management and monetization squarely on the creator.

His trajectory highlights an emerging genre where social dynamics become the subject matter, and platforms like YouTube, TikTok and Telegram serve as canvases for personal experimentation as much as entertainment.

In a digital landscape crowded with fleeting trends, Trahov’s path underscores that engaging content can arise from human interaction itself, for better or worse.

Credit:
Samcilla Baakojr
𝘛𝘩𝘦 𝘸𝘳𝘪𝘵𝘦𝘳 𝘪𝘴 𝘢 digital marketing specialist 𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘱𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘢𝘯𝘵𝘩𝘳𝘰𝘱𝘪𝘴𝘵.

Dumelo Launches Indian Mini Tractors Built for Ghana’s Smallholder Farmers

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Deputy Minister of Food and Agriculture John Dumelo has officially launched Captain Tractors onto the Ghanaian market and inaugurated a new Agricultural Mechanisation Centre in the Eastern Region, marking a significant step in the government’s campaign to close one of the most stubborn gaps in Ghana’s agricultural productivity: affordable mechanisation for smallholder farmers.

The launch, facilitated through a partnership between Ghanaian enterprise group Hawkrad and India’s Captain Tractors, targets the large segment of Ghanaian farmers who have historically been unable to afford full-scale industrial tractors but whose farm operations far exceed what manual labour alone can support. Captain Tractors is an established Indian manufacturer recognised for compact, fuel-efficient, and easy-to-operate tractor models engineered for diverse farming conditions, making their machines particularly well suited to the variable terrain and scale of smallholder farms common across Ghana’s agricultural zones.

Addressing farmers, traditional leaders, and private sector partners at the ceremony, Dumelo framed the event as a decisive shift in how government approaches farm equipment access. “For too long, our smallholder farmers have been caught in the middle ground, needing more power than a hoe but finding massive industrial tractors impracticable or unaffordable,” he said. “These tractors represent precision and accessibility.”

The Deputy Minister described the new mechanisation centre as the most strategically critical component of the initiative, warning that equipment without maintenance infrastructure quickly becomes a liability. “A tractor without a service centre is merely a ticking clock. This centre will serve as a sanctuary for maintenance, a hub for spare parts, and, most importantly, a classroom. We are not just giving farmers keys. We are building an ecosystem of operators, technicians and entrepreneurs,” he said.

Tractor
Tractor

The launch aligns with the government’s Feed Ghana Programme, under which 50 farm service centres are being established nationwide to provide farmers with on-demand access to tractors, combine harvesters, irrigation systems, improved seeds, and agricultural guidance. The Deputy Minister has consistently stressed that efficiency drives productivity and profitability, and that mechanisation interventions must be paired with technical capacity to be sustainable.

President Mahama, speaking at the National Agribusiness Dialogue in 2025, made the philosophy explicit: “What farmers really need is not to own tractors and combine harvesters, but access to the services.” The Eastern Region facility directly embodies this access-over-ownership model.

Eastern Regional Director of Agriculture Samuel Barima Offiso described the partnership between Hawkrad and Captain Tractors as one that would extend mechanisation services beyond the immediate enclave to the entire Eastern Region and eventually to Ghana at large.

Kwesi Arthur Sweeps Ghana’s Apple Music Chart, Now Featured Globally on Rap Life Africa

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Ghanaian rapper Kwesi Arthur has secured one of the most prestigious spotlights in African hip-hop, landing the February featured artist slot on Apple Music’s Rap Life Africa show, weeks after his eight-track project Redemption Valley dominated Ghana’s Apple Music chart by placing all eight of its songs simultaneously in the top eight positions.

Apple Music’s Rap Life Radio, hosted by Global Editorial Head of Hip-Hop and Rhythm and Blues Ebro Darden, and joined for the Africa edition by Africa Now Radio host Nandi Madida, will dedicate this month’s episode to Kwesi Arthur, focusing on his latest single “Immigrant” and the themes of displacement, ambition, and emotional reckoning that run throughout Redemption Valley.

The eight-track project dropped officially on February 6, 2026, following an early-access release on the EVEN platform, which allowed fans to support the artist directly ahead of the wide streaming rollout. Tracks including “Okay Switch,” “Yawa (Hosanna),” “Broken Pieces,” and “Immigrant” emerged immediately as fan favourites, sparking listening parties in Ghana and Ghanaian diaspora communities across the United States.

The full tracklist spans “Redemption,” “I Be Where I Wanted To Be,” “Yawa (Hosanna),” “Immigrant,” “Babylon Interlude,” “What They Want (Gye),” “Okay Switch,” and “Broken Pieces,” with the title track “Redemption” leading the chart sweep and serving as the project’s spiritual and sonic anchor.

The project takes its name from a real street in Tema Community Nine, the neighbourhood that shaped Kwesi Arthur’s worldview and artistic voice, which here becomes a metaphor for growth, memory, and personal reckoning.

In an exclusive conversation with Apple Music, Kwesi Arthur opened up about the making of “Immigrant.” “I started working on this song six months into living in the USA. The loneliness, the reality of being a foreigner thousands of miles away from home, and navigating cultural shocks that nobody warns you about hit me hard. Growing up in Tema, I always thought our people who made it abroad had it made. That is far from the truth. Conversations I had with immigrants here about our shared struggle and the unspoken weight we all carry helped me finish the song,” he said.

The project marks a clean break from Kwesi Arthur’s previous label era, with “Redemption” addressing the scars of his recent journey, including his highly publicised legal battles and transition to full independence, over production by award-winning beatmaker M.O.G Beatz.

Rap Life Africa also features South African artist Blxckie and Young Stunna’s collaboration “alupheli,” the lead single from Blxckie’s upcoming project 4LUV2, alongside “Madibuseng” from Sjava, Lowfeye, and LaCabra.

Ghana Bond Market Processes GH¢2.26 Billion as Yields Continue Steady Decline

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Ghana’s Ghana Fixed Income Market (GFIM) processed GH¢2.26 billion across 554 transactions on Tuesday, February 17, 2026, as institutional investors maintained broad appetite across government bonds, treasury bills, and corporate debt, with sell and buyback trades accounting for the largest single segment of the day’s activity.

Sell and buyback trades involving Government of Ghana (GoG) notes and bonds led the session, recording GH¢623.64 million through 40 transactions, representing 27.6 percent of total volume. This segment, which allows financial institutions to manage short-term liquidity while retaining exposure to government paper, saw its largest transaction involve a GoG bond maturing February 5, 2036, carrying a 9.70 percent coupon, which saw GH¢296.45 million change hands across three deals at a yield of 14.38 percent and a closing price of 75.5589 cedis per 100 cedis face value.

Treasury bills were the most active by number of transactions, recording GH¢863.41 million through 419 separate deals. The most heavily traded bill was a security maturing February 15, 2027, which alone accounted for GH¢458.40 million across 83 transactions at a closing price of 90.6053 cedis, reflecting sustained institutional preference for near-term government instruments offering competitive and liquid returns.

New GoG notes and bonds recorded GH¢500.33 million through 42 transactions. The most actively traded security in this segment was a bond maturing February 16, 2027, carrying an 8.35 percent coupon, which recorded GH¢75.32 million across five deals at a yield of 12.28 percent and a closing price of 96.4073 cedis. The 12.28 percent yield on the February 2027 bond represents remarkable compression compared to yields exceeding 25 percent recorded on similar securities in February 2025, reflecting restored investor confidence following implementation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) supported economic programme and completion of external debt restructuring.

Corporate bonds contributed GH¢261.30 million across 52 transactions, a notably strong session for the segment. The most actively traded corporate instrument was a CMB bond maturing August 30, 2027, carrying a 13.00 percent coupon, which recorded GH¢244.00 million across six deals at a closing price of 95.8063 cedis. Old GoG notes and bonds rounded out the session with GH¢9.87 million through one transaction, involving a bond maturing November 8, 2027, carrying a 20.50 percent coupon, which traded at a yield of 12.51 percent and a closing price of 111.9815 cedis, reflecting the premium pricing that higher-coupon legacy securities continue to command.

Trading momentum has strengthened markedly into 2026, with January volumes reaching GH¢36.91 billion, a 118 percent increase from the GH¢16.90 billion traded in January 2025. The GFIM operates under the Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE) using the Bloomberg E-Bond trading and market surveillance system, and has processed over one trillion cedis in cumulative trades since its establishment in August 2015.

Ghana’s Stock Market Adds GH¢8 Billion in a Single Tuesday Session

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Ghana’s stock market delivered one of its most dramatic single-day performances of the year on Tuesday, February 17, 2026, with the benchmark index surging more than 600 points and total market capitalisation jumping by over eight billion Ghana cedis in a single trading session.

The Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE) Composite Index (GSE-CI) closed at 11,135.13 points, a gain of 608.60 points or 5.78 percent over Monday’s close of 10,526.53. The GSE Financial Stocks Index (GSE-FSI) also advanced strongly, rising 178.59 points to settle at 6,001.58, marking the first time the financial sub-index has crossed the 6,000-point threshold in the current trading year.

Market capitalisation reflects the scale of investor confidence expressed on the day. Monday’s session closed at GH¢199.31 billion. By Tuesday’s close, that figure had risen to GH¢207.46 billion, representing a single-session gain of GH¢8.15 billion, an increase that underscores the growing momentum attracting both domestic and institutional investors to the bourse.

Trading volume on Tuesday stood at 2,265,326 shares, valued at GH¢26.92 million, compared to Monday’s heavier session of 8,574,992 shares worth GH¢43.87 million. The lower volume accompanying the Tuesday price surge suggests that the advance was driven by upward price movements across key counters rather than a high-turnover trading day.

Monday’s session itself had been a strong one, with GCB Bank leading gainers with a 10 percent share price appreciation to close at GH¢27.40 per share, followed by SIC Insurance Company and Ecobank Ghana, each rising by approximately 10 percent. MTN Ghana recorded the highest volume on Monday at 7.61 million traded shares.

Year to date, the GSE-CI has now gained 26.96 percent since January 1, 2026, while the GSE-FSI has advanced 29.14 percent over the same period. Both performances place Ghana among the stronger-performing frontier markets in the current quarter and reflect recovering investor sentiment following currency stabilisation and a series of positive macroeconomic signals from the Bank of Ghana (BoG).

Tuesday marked the 7,155th trading session in the Ghana Stock Exchange’s history. Wednesday’s data will be closely watched to determine whether the rally has further legs or represents a short-term correction peak ahead of the week’s close.

Ashanti Police Confess the Truth: Big Men Call, We Release Siren Suspects

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Police officers in the Ashanti Region have made a startling public admission: influential personalities routinely call to secure the release of people arrested for illegally using sirens on public roads, leaving officers trapped between enforcing the law and protecting their own careers.

Assistant Service Superintendent (ASP) Awudu Abdul Razak of the Motor Traffic and Transport Department (MTTD) of the Ghana Police Service in the Ashanti Region made the admission during a public engagement, lifting the lid on a systemic breakdown that has allowed siren abuse to spiral out of control across the region.

“You’ll arrest and they’ll know you arrested them. But you’ll be there, a call will come requesting that you release them. Will you say you won’t release? Are you going to say you won’t release the person?” ASP Razak said, explaining that officers who refuse the calls face direct victimisation.

The MTTD revealed that whenever persons are arrested for road traffic offences such as the unlawful use of sirens, influential persons call to request their release, a pattern that has contributed to a worsening situation across the region.

Under Ghana’s road traffic regulations, only designated emergency and security services are legally permitted to use sirens, among them the National Ambulance Service, the Ghana National Fire Service, and law enforcement agencies responding to active emergencies. The routine use of sirens by private citizens, business executives, and political associates to beat traffic is a criminal offence. Yet in the Ashanti Region, the practice has become so normalised that enforcement has effectively collapsed under the weight of elite interference.

The MTTD’s public lament points to a deeper governance problem: the selective application of the law based on social and political proximity. When police officers face professional consequences for upholding the law, the law itself becomes a tool of power rather than a standard applied equally to all citizens.

The MTTD has previously acknowledged that physical monitoring of unlawful siren use is increasingly difficult, and the department announced plans to deploy information and communications technology (ICT) devices to support enforcement, though implementation has remained slow.

The admission comes as the Ashanti Region’s police commands have drawn attention for both their integrity wins and their enforcement challenges in recent weeks, underscoring the uneven pressures officers face across the region’s diverse political and social landscape.

NPP Activist Uses RTI Law to Probe GETFund, EOCO, YEA and NEIP Records

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An opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) communications team member has filed sweeping Right to Information (RTI) requests against four government-linked agencies, demanding detailed procurement records, scholarship beneficiary lists, and financial recovery data stretching back more than a decade.

Emmanuel Senyo Amekplenu, a resident of Oyarifa in the Greater Accra Region and a known NPP communicator, submitted the requests to the Youth Employment Agency (YEA), the Ghana Education Trust Fund (GETFund), the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO), and the National Entrepreneurship and Innovation Programme (NEIP), covering the 2025 and 2026 financial years.

The requests include copies of approved procurement plans, detailed lists of goods, services, and contracts awarded, including suppliers, contract sums, procurement methods, and contract dates, as well as any amendments or revisions to those plans. At GETFund, Amekplenu went further, requesting comprehensive information on scholarship beneficiaries, including award amounts, selection criteria, committee compositions, and internal guidelines governing scholarship decisions, areas that have historically attracted controversy under successive governments.

EOCO was asked to furnish details of all financial recoveries dating back to 2012, including total amounts recovered, case-by-case breakdowns, and confirmation that funds were deposited into official state accounts. NEIP was asked to provide full income and expenditure statements for the 2025 and 2026 financial year.

In his letters, Amekplenu stated the requests were made “in the public interest to promote transparency, accountability, and responsible management of public resources,” and requested that any refusal be accompanied by written reasons as required under the Right to Information Act, 2019 (Act 989).

The requests arrive against a backdrop of fresh RTI enforcement activity. In January 2026, the RTI Commission imposed a 100,000 Ghana cedi administrative penalty on EOCO after the agency failed to release information requested by a private citizen and did not respond to Commission directives to submit the information for review. The ruling signals that the Commission is prepared to act against agencies that treat information requests as optional, regardless of political context.

GETFund and YEA have both faced scrutiny in prior years over scholarship awards and programme spending, making the requests politically significant as the country moves deeper into the National Democratic Congress (NDC) administration’s first year in office.

The RTI Act gives every Ghanaian citizen the right to request information from public bodies within defined timelines, with the Commission empowered to investigate refusals and impose sanctions on non-compliant institutions.

World Cup-Bound Ghana Gets a Timely Gift: 1,000 US Visa Slots in One Week

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The United States Embassy in Accra has announced the immediate release of more than 1,000 business and tourism visa interview slots, offering Ghanaians a rare short-notice opportunity to secure appointments at a time when demand for travel to the United States is surging ahead of the 2026 Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) World Cup.

The Embassy indicated that a significant number of B1/B2 visa appointments are currently open and encouraged applicants to take advantage of the availability, adding that the move forms part of broader preparations by the United States to facilitate increased travel ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which it will co-host alongside Mexico and Canada.

“There are more than 1,000 B1/B2 visa appointment slots available in the next week — one of those could be yours,” the Embassy stated in a notice posted on its official Facebook page on Tuesday, February 17, 2026. “Book a new appointment, or move up one scheduled for later in the year — we want to interview you now!”

Ghana is among eight African countries that have qualified for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, and fans are expected to travel in significant numbers to support the Black Stars at their fifth World Cup appearance. The announcement therefore arrives at a strategically important moment for prospective Ghanaian travellers planning to attend the tournament.

However, applicants are advised to note important policy changes currently in effect. Effective January 21, 2026, the United States Department of State paused all immigrant visa issuances to nationals of countries, including Ghana, whose immigrants have a high rate of collecting public assistance at taxpayers’ expense. Immigrant visa applicants from affected countries may still submit applications and attend interviews, but issuances remain paused. Additionally, Presidential Proclamation 10998 suspends or limits entry and visa issuance to nationals of 39 countries, meaning some applicants may attend interviews but ultimately be deemed ineligible for issuance or admission.

Applicants for student and exchange visitor visas have been instructed to set all their social media accounts to public to facilitate identity vetting as part of admissibility screening under current United States policy.

The B1/B2 visa covers short-term visits for business, tourism, and family visits. Applicants are required to complete the DS-160 online application form before scheduling an interview. Visa application fees are non-refundable and non-transferable. Applicants can book appointments at gh.usembassy.gov/visas and are encouraged to follow the Embassy’s official handle at @USEmbassyGhana for further updates.

Okraku’s CAF Role Gives His Ghana Football Vision a Continental Dimension

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Ghana Football Association (GFA) President Kurt Okraku says he took over a sport in ruins in 2019 and has spent six years rebuilding it from the ground up, and he now carries that ambition to the continental stage after securing a position at the summit of African football governance.

Speaking on the Asaase Breakfast Show on Tuesday, February 17, 2026, Okraku reflected on inheriting what he described as a completely broken ecosystem following the 2018 dissolution of the GFA in the wake of investigative journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas’ Number 12 exposé. “The enormity of the task hit me on my first day,” he said. “We had to find the right people with passion and skill to execute our vision. COVID delayed some plans, but we persevered.”

Okraku recently added significant continental weight to his portfolio, being appointed Second Vice President of the Confederation of African Football (CAF) and Chairman of the Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) Anti-Discrimination and Racism Committee. Under his CAF role, he will oversee club competitions including the CAF Champions League, the CAF Confederation Cup, and the CAF Women’s Champions League, restoring Ghana to a level of African football influence it last held under former GFA President Kwesi Nyantakyi.

Domestically, Okraku cited the Ghana Premier League (GPL) as a key indicator of progress. All league matches are now televised, clubs received one million Ghana cedis each at the start of the current season, match officials’ earnings were raised by over 100 percent, and the league winner will take home two million Ghana cedis, with merit awards for the top 15 clubs totalling more than nine million cedis, figures Okraku described as unprecedented in the league’s history.

On women’s football, Okraku pointed to a 742,000 dollar investment in a Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA)-standard pitch in the Upper East Region, academies at Prempeh College and Achimota School, and full television coverage of the Women’s Premier League as evidence of structural commitment. “Today, 90 percent of the Black Wings players play abroad, and that is a testament to the investment we’ve made in women’s football,” he said.

Off the broadcast, Okraku has also activated the 2026 strategic agenda for the national Under-15 Girls team, convening the management committee on February 16 to begin nationwide talent identification ahead of international competitions later this year.

Despite the Black Stars exiting the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) at the group stage in both 2021 and 2023, and failing to qualify for the most recent edition, Okraku was direct about his remaining ambition. “I want to win the Africa Cup of Nations, and that is the fact,” he said. Ghana, four-time African champions, have not lifted the trophy since 1982 and have finished as runners-up three times in the intervening decades. The immediate focus is the 2026 FIFA World Cup to be co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, where the Black Stars will compete.

Eight Ghanaian Tomato Traders Massacred in Burkina Faso, Air Force Evacuates Survivors

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Eight Ghanaians have been killed and several others injured after jihadist militants ambushed a truck carrying tomato traders in northern Burkina Faso, in an attack that has prompted Ghana to launch an air evacuation operation and issue urgent new travel warnings for citizens in the sub-region.

The attack occurred on Saturday, February 14, 2026, in Titao, a town in the Loroum Province of northern Burkina Faso that has been repeatedly targeted by extremist groups since 2019. All eight victims were members of the Ghana National Tomatoes Traders and Transporters Association, engaged in legitimate cross-border trading activities when their vehicle came under fire.

The Al-Qaeda-linked militant group JNIM, known by its French acronym for the Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims, claimed responsibility for the attack on February 16, 2026.

Eight Ghanaian women who had been travelling with the group survived the attack and assisted authorities with the identification of victims. Several of the deceased carried Ghana Cards and other identification documents. However, Burkina Faso authorities informed Ghana’s mission that the bodies had begun to decompose and could not be repatriated, and that burials would proceed locally with documentation to support any future DNA verification process.

Foreign Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa confirmed that on the direct instruction of President John Mahama, a medical evacuation operation was immediately activated to bring all injured Ghanaian survivors home. The Ghana Air Force conducted the operation, with the injured expected to arrive on Ghanaian soil the same day the government issued its statement. “Government strongly condemns and denounces terrorism, and all forms of violent extremism,” the Minister wrote.

President Mahama described the killings as a “mindless act of terror” and expressed solidarity with the Government and people of Burkina Faso, while calling for a renewed collective regional security approach. “This attack reminds us that collective efforts are needed to safeguard citizens across borders,” he said.

Ghana’s embassies and high commissions in selected sub-regional jurisdictions have been placed on high consular alert. Ghanaians already residing in areas where violent extremist activity has been recorded are being advised to restrict movement, maintain regular contact with Ghana’s Embassy in Burkina Faso, and ensure identification documents remain accessible to enable swift consular assistance. Citizens requiring emergency assistance have been directed to contact the Ministry of Foreign Affairs through its designated emergency lines.

In a related development, tomato traders have suspended all operations to Burkina Faso and have threatened sanctions against members who violate the suspension. The killings have intensified calls from agribusiness leaders for urgent investment in domestic tomato production to eliminate the economic pressure that drives traders onto dangerous cross-border routes.

Nigeria Sends Warning Shot to Temu: Your Data Practices End Here

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Nigeria’s data protection regulator has opened a formal investigation into Chinese-owned e-commerce platform Temu, putting one of the world’s fastest-growing online marketplaces on notice that aggressive data harvesting strategies that have faced little accountability elsewhere will not be tolerated in Africa’s largest internet market.

The Nigeria Data Protection Commission (NDPC) ordered an immediate probe into Temu’s data processing activities on Sunday, February 16, 2026, citing concerns over possible online surveillance, accountability deficits, failure to uphold data minimisation principles, lack of transparency, inadequate duty of care, and questionable cross-border data transfers involving the personal information of an estimated 12.7 million Nigerian users.

Temu confirmed receipt of the inquiry on February 17, 2026, and indicated it would cooperate. “At Temu, protecting user privacy and data security is a top priority. We are committed to complying with applicable laws and regulations in our data practices. We will continue to engage in open and constructive dialogue with the NDPC to address any questions or concerns,” the company said.

The investigation carries serious financial consequences. Under the Nigeria Data Protection Act (NDP Act) of 2023, companies found in breach face substantial fines. The NDPC demonstrated its willingness to act in July 2025, when it imposed a 766.24 million naira fine on MultiChoice Nigeria, Africa’s largest pay-TV operator, following a year-long probe into intrusive data processing and illegal cross-border transfers.

The NDPC’s enforcement record extends well beyond that single case. In March 2025, the Commission ordered investigations into TikTok and Truecaller over their data practices. A separate 32.8 million dollar fine against Meta over behavioural advertising was resolved through a consent judgment in October 2025, with Meta committing to specific corrective privacy measures for Nigerian users. The Commission probed more than 1,369 firms last year for data infractions and launched sector-wide audits targeting fintechs and other high-risk processors.

The NDPC also placed local businesses on alert, warning that delivery companies, payment processors, and other Nigerian firms working with Temu could face direct liability under the NDP Act if they did not independently verify the platform’s compliance before entering into data-processing arrangements on its behalf.

Temu faces parallel scrutiny beyond Nigeria. South Africa’s National Consumer Commission launched a formal investigation into Temu and Shein in late 2025, probing compliance with the Consumer Protection Act and raising concerns over the companies’ reliance on algorithms and data-mining practices to drive consumer engagement.

Temu, owned by Nasdaq-listed PDD Holdings, operates a heavily discounted online marketplace spanning fashion, electronics, and household goods that has expanded rapidly in Nigeria over the past two years. The platform recorded approximately 70 million daily active users globally at the time of the NDPC’s announcement.

Ghanaian Economist to Africa: Turn the Great Powers’ Desperation Into Infrastructure

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A Ghanaian economist has told African governments they are sitting on the strongest negotiating position the continent has held in decades and must stop squandering it on symbolic agreements that deliver nothing for ordinary citizens.

Theophilus Acheampong, technical adviser to Ghana’s Ministry of Finance, delivered the message at the 32nd Investing in African Mining Indaba held in Cape Town, South Africa, from February 9 to 12, 2026, an event that drew record attendance including 58 government ministers and two heads of state against the backdrop of an intensifying global scramble for Africa’s lithium, cobalt, manganese, copper, and rare earth minerals.

A flagship study by the Africa Finance Corporation (AFC), released at the conference, valued Africa’s total mineral wealth at 29.5 trillion United States dollars, roughly 20 percent of the world’s mineral endowment, with an estimated 8.6 trillion dollars of that wealth remaining unmobilised largely due to investor uncertainty about policy stability and data gaps.

Acheampong argued that the European Union (EU), the United States (US), Gulf countries, and China are all actively competing for access to African mineral resources, and that this rivalry represents a rare window of leverage that African governments must convert into tangible economic gains rather than photo opportunities.

His prescription was direct: use mineral access as bargaining power to extract infrastructure co-financing, technology transfer agreements, and phased localisation targets from competing suitors. “Africa must use competing courtships from the EU, US, Gulf countries, China and others to secure capital for infrastructure co-financing and technology and skills transfer. This moves beyond just signing memoranda of understanding,” he said.

He cautioned, however, that external partners cannot be relied upon to deliver development outcomes that African governments have not clearly defined for themselves. “If history has taught us anything, it is the fact that often you cannot rely on other external partners to deliver your country for yourselves. You have to build the institutions at home, and you have to be clear about what you want to achieve,” he said.

Acheampong also highlighted a growing momentum toward regional collaboration, noting that some African countries and blocs are already exploring joint ventures, shared infrastructure corridors, and integrated value chains to industrialise resources collectively rather than individually, a model he described as more strategically resilient than bilateral country-by-country negotiations that weaken Africa’s collective leverage.

The broader conference reflected this shift in mood. Leaders including Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema argued that if Africa processes its own minerals on-site, converting lithium into batteries or iron into steel, the value of its endowment multiplies by eight to ten times, with beneficiation increasingly becoming the price that global powers must pay to access African soil.

Analysts at the conference expressed cautious optimism that African governments are finally beginning to align their mineral strategies with broader industrial policy, though they stressed that the gap between ambitious pledges at annual conferences and concrete outcomes on the ground remains the continent’s most persistent challenge.

Mahama to Foreign Cashew Traders: Build Factories Here or Leave

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President John Dramani Mahama has issued a direct challenge to foreign companies currently buying and exporting Ghana’s raw cashew: invest in local processing facilities or exit the Ghanaian market altogether, marking the most forceful declaration yet of his administration’s intent to end the colonial-era model of shipping unprocessed commodities abroad.

Speaking at the inaugural Ghana Tree Crops Investment Summit and Exhibition at the Accra International Conference Centre on Tuesday, February 17, 2026, the President was blunt. “We will no longer export raw cashew,” he said. “I invite our investment partners who export cashews to come and build the capacity to process our cashew locally. I want to travel and be able to buy cashew and see the produce of Ghana, not the produce of India or produce of some third-party country.”

The directive extended equally to shea and rubber, with Mahama setting a firm national target of processing between 50 and 60 percent of all three commodities domestically each year, backed by agro-industrial parks, fiscal incentives for private processors, and strengthened regulatory supervision through the Tree Crops Development Authority (TCDA).

In a moment of unusual personal candour, the President revealed that he is himself a cocoa and oil palm farmer, making his policy positions a matter of direct financial consequence to him. “When the price is reduced by the government, it affects me too. I want to be able to empathise with farmers so that when we take any policy decision, we know that it has an effect on farmers and we feel it ourselves,” he said. His remarks came as the farmgate price of cocoa was cut from GH¢3,625 to GH¢2,587 per bag following international market adjustments.

On cocoa, the President was equally pointed, arguing that Ghana’s pride in being Africa’s leading raw cocoa exporter is misplaced. “We’ve exported raw beans since Gordon Guggisberg’s time,” he said. “And to think that in the 21st century, we are still the largest leading exporter of raw cocoa beans, that is not an accolade we should take pride in. We should take pride in being the leading exporter of manufactured cocoa products.”

The summit, organised by the TCDA with World Bank support, aims to mobilise 100 million dollars in investment commitments for each of the six strategic tree crop value chains, totalling 600 million dollars across cashew, oil palm, rubber, coconut, shea and mango. TCDA has projected that each value chain alone could generate up to two billion dollars in annual export earnings by 2030 if adequate processing capacity is developed.

The President called on traditional rulers to unlock land for responsible agricultural expansion, describing customary tenure constraints as one of the biggest structural barriers to scaling tree crops. He also challenged public officials and religious leaders to invest directly in farming rather than simply advocating for others to do so. “We can’t just always talk and say people should go back to the land when you yourself are not going back to the land,” he said.

Invoking an Akan proverb, Mahama closed with a rallying call. “When you climb a good tree, that is when you are supported. Today, Ghana is climbing a good tree — the tree crop sector. We invite all Ghanaians and our partners to climb this tree with us.”

The summit runs through February 20, with each remaining day dedicated to investor engagement across specific value chains.

GFZA Turns Chocolate Week Into an Investment Pitch for Cocoa Processing

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The Ghana Free Zones Authority (GFZA) has used its 2026 National Chocolate Week celebrations to make an urgent case for deeper investment in Ghana’s cocoa processing sector, warning that the country continues to surrender enormous economic value by exporting raw beans rather than finished chocolate products.

The week-long celebration, which formed part of the Authority’s 30th anniversary programme, culminated in a product exhibition and stakeholder engagement at the Authority’s forecourt in Accra, bringing together cocoa processing companies, media partners, and industry guests under the theme “Celebrating Ghana’s Cocoa Heritage the Free Zones Way: Taste, Learn and Enjoy.”

As of January 2026, the GFZA had licensed 20 cocoa processing companies operating across the full value chain, producing cocoa butter, cocoa liquor, cocoa powder, confectionery, beverages, skincare inputs, and by-products. Licensed companies generated approximately 1.8 billion United States dollars in export earnings in 2025 and provided direct employment to nearly 1,900 Ghanaians, with additional indirect employment created across packaging, logistics, catering, and farming communities.

Deputy Chief Executive Officer of the GFZA in charge of Finance and Administration, Musa Sibiri Hamidu, told guests and staff that the celebration is held annually to coincide with National Chocolate Day on February 14, which is observed nationwide to promote local cocoa consumption, industry growth, and national pride. He stressed that the Authority’s ambition extends beyond celebrating what has been achieved, noting that existing enterprises must expand their operations while prospective investors are being actively invited to enter the sector through the Free Zones framework.

The GFZA’s investment pitch rests on a package of incentives that includes duty-free importation of machinery and inputs, corporate tax holidays, unrestricted repatriation of profits, and streamlined licensing processes designed to reduce the administrative burden on export-oriented manufacturers.

The broader national cocoa promotion effort was also reflected in a separate launch of the 2026 National Chocolate Month by the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Creative Arts, which brought together the Ghana Tourism Authority (GTA), the Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) and the Cocoa Processing Company (CPC). The ministry’s Director for Tourism, Geoffrey Tamakloe, described cocoa as a symbol of Ghana’s agricultural excellence, tourism identity, and economic resilience, urging Ghanaians to deliberately choose locally produced chocolate to sustain farming families and keep economic value within the country.

The GFZA acknowledged exhibitors and sponsors including the Cocoa Processing Company, Plot Enterprise, Niche Cocoa, Cargill, Koa Impact, Olam Ghana, HPW Fresh and Dry, and FairAfrique, several of whom demonstrated innovation through products such as chocolate-coated nuts and cocoa pulp juice, illustrating the expanding commercial potential of cocoa by-products.

Ghana contributes an estimated 20 to 25 percent of global cocoa output but captures only a fraction of the industry’s final value, a gap the GFZA says can only be closed through sustained investment in processing capacity, product diversification, and premium branding.

Viral Cement-and-Beans Video Is Foreign, Not Ghanaian, Says FDA

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Ghana’s Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) has moved swiftly to reassure the public that a viral social media video purporting to show beans being preserved with cement does not depict any practice used or permitted in Ghana, and has urged consumers to report any suspicious food handling they encounter to authorities.

In a statement issued on February 16, 2026, the Authority cautioned Ghanaians against using cement or any other unapproved substances in food preservation, stressing that such practices are neither safe nor permitted under Ghana’s food safety regulations.

The FDA said it had taken note of the video circulating on social media and purporting to demonstrate the preservation of beans using a white powdery substance believed to be concrete cement. The Authority clarified that the method shown is not part of any recognised Ghanaian agricultural or food preservation practice, and is not recommended or endorsed by the Plant Protection and Regulatory Services Directorate (PPRSD) of the Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MoFA).

A closer review of the footage provided additional clarity on its origins. The video is not in a Ghanaian language, and shows unsafe handling practices including applying chemicals with bare hands and standing directly on a heap of beans without protective gear. The FDA described these actions as clear violations of acceptable food safety standards that could pose serious health risks to consumers.

“The FDA, together with its stakeholder institutions, does not approve of food preservation practices that compromise food safety and public health,” the Authority stated, condemning the use of unapproved substances, poor hygiene, and direct hand contact with food without protective wear.

The warning is part of a broader pattern of enforcement action the FDA has been pursuing in early 2026. The Authority has also directed that all food service establishments operating without a valid Food Hygiene Permit face immediate closure, citing Section 130(1) of the Public Health Act, 2012 (Act 851), which prohibits the manufacture, sale, supply, or storage of food products from unregistered premises.

Farm produce aggregators and retailers have been specifically advised to avoid unsafe preservation methods, while consumers are encouraged to report any suspicious food handling or preservation activities to the FDA through its official channels for investigation and possible sanctions.

Burkina Faso Attacks Expose Why Ghana Needs an Agricultural Database Now

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The head of the Chamber of Agribusiness Ghana (CAG) has called on government to build a national agricultural database that would reduce Ghana’s dangerous over-reliance on cross-border food sourcing, a practice that has now cost Ghanaian traders their lives following a deadly insurgent attack in Burkina Faso.

Chief Executive Officer of the Chamber, Anthony Morrison, said the absence of a coordinated agricultural information system leaves import permit authorities with no reliable basis for regulating approvals, and enables a recurring market distortion in which imported produce arrives on Ghanaian markets just as local farmers are harvesting, triggering price crashes and post-harvest losses that erode farmer incomes.

“We need an agriculture information database where we know how many farms are under production for each commodity,” he said. “If someone wants to import 50,000 tonnes, the system should indicate what quantities will soon be harvested locally so that such permits are not automatically approved.”

The call comes against the backdrop of a recent militant attack in Burkina Faso’s Loroum Province in which Ghanaian tomato traders and drivers were killed while travelling to source produce, making clear that the country’s food security is now dangerously tied to the regional security of its neighbours. Morrison described the incident as a wake-up call that demands an urgent policy response.

The Chamber has advocated the creation of such a database for more than a decade, arguing that production tracking would give authorities the tools to manage import permits in a way that complements domestic harvests rather than undermining them.

The database proposal forms part of a much larger vision the Chamber is advancing. CAG is proposing the Ghana National Agricultural Transformation Strategy (GNATS) for 2026 to 2045, backed by a 30 billion dollar investment plan to be mobilised from government, the private sector, development partners and innovative financing mechanisms. Morrison warned that no country has achieved genuine agricultural transformation through short-term programmes, and that successful agricultural economies are built on sustained commitment to long-term strategic frameworks maintained across political cycles for 15 to 30 years.

“We spend over 2.5 billion dollars annually importing food we could produce, our farmers remain poor, youth flee agriculture, and we lag behind countries that made long-term strategic commitments decades ago,” Morrison said. “The question is not whether Ghana can afford to develop a long-term agricultural strategy; it is whether we can afford not to.”

The Chamber maintains that a functioning agricultural data system would serve as the operational backbone of any such long-term strategy, enabling smarter planning, protecting farmers from market distortions, and keeping Ghanaian traders out of harm’s way by reducing the economic pressure that drives them into insecure border regions.

Priscilla Mensah’s 63rd-Minute Strike Sends Black Princesses to Uganda

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Ghana’s Black Princesses have kept their bid for an eighth consecutive appearance at the Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) Under-20 Women’s World Cup alive, beating South Africa 1-0 in Nelspruit on Saturday, February 14, 2026, to advance 3-2 on aggregate to the final qualifying round.

The first half at the Nelspruit-Mbombela Stadium ended goalless, but Ghana asserted control after the break. Midfielder Priscilla Mensah proved decisive, striking in the 63rd minute to seal qualification following the 2-2 draw in the first leg at the Accra Sports Stadium. Mensah had come on as a substitute to replace an injured Mary Amponsah shortly after half-time and made an immediate impact, meeting a solo run from the wing and slotting the ball into the bottom left corner.

South Africa pressed for an equaliser and came closest in the 78th minute, but goalkeeper Jenna stood firm to preserve the clean sheet that sent Ghana through.

For the players, the result was about more than qualification. It was about safeguarding a legacy built over nearly a decade of excellence and ensuring Ghana remains a fixture at youth women’s football’s grandest stage.

Head coach Charles Sampson was visibly moved after the final whistle. “The mood is unbelievable. You could see a lot of emotions, even in me. But the gallant ladies remained resolute and stuck to the plan, which paid off. The sort of challenges we had in this particular camp were huge, and so we are excited about the progress,” he said.

Uganda await Ghana in the final qualifying round after eliminating Zambia 2-1 on aggregate, drawing 1-1 at home before recording a crucial 1-0 away win to seal their berth. The winner of the Ghana-Uganda tie will secure one of Africa’s allocated slots at the 2026 FIFA Under-20 Women’s World Cup, scheduled to be held in Poland from September 5 to 27.

Sampson is already focused on the next challenge. “Our goal is to go to the World Cup and South Africa was supposed to be a challenge for us, so we are extremely happy we could surpass them. Now we will have time to prepare well to face Uganda,” he said.

Kumasi’s Skilled Graduates Find Jobs Before Leaving the Ceremony

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More than 200 young Ghanaians who completed a six-month technical training programme in Kumasi walked out of their graduation ceremony last week with job offers already in hand, in a demonstration of what structured, industry-linked skills development can achieve for the country’s swelling pool of unemployed youth.

The Design and Technology Institute (DTI), in partnership with the Kumasi Technical Institute (KTI) and its Precision Quality Internship (PQI) sub-implementing partner Accents and Art, hosted the 2026 DTI Jobs and Opportunities Fair at the KTI campus on Wednesday, February 12, 2026. The event ran under the theme “Empowering the Next Generation through Precision, Quality, Innovation and Local Industry for Sustainable Careers.”

A total of 228 young people graduated from the six-month Precision Quality Internship Programme, with DTI announcing that 211 job opportunities had already been secured across various trades. An additional 40 graduates received startup kits to support microenterprise creation, while five others will advance into the DTI Innovation and Incubation Hub for further mentorship and business development support.

Valedictorian Felix Owusu captured the mood of his cohort directly. “This programme has not just prepared me for the industry but has shaped my understanding of the business world with the soft skills aspect,” he said.

The graduation flowed into a full-scale jobs fair, with more than 26 companies setting up exhibition booths on the KTI lawn. More than 1,000 young people attended and engaged with exhibitors spanning manufacturing, engineering, construction, creative arts, information and communications technology (ICT), automotive services, energy, and technical trades. Career support on the day included business clinics run by Fidelity Bank, curriculum vitae clinics facilitated by Jobberman Ghana, and on-the-spot interview sessions with employers offering jobs, internships, and apprenticeships.

Bernice Gavor, General Manager of Accents and Art, pointed to a structural gap that the programme is designed to close. “Kumasi is a major economic hub,” she said. “Yet many skilled young people remain disconnected from these opportunities,” adding that migration to Accra is often the result of poor local industry linkages rather than a genuine absence of opportunity in the Ashanti Region.

The PQI programme focuses on youth classified as Not in Employment, Education or Training, a population estimated at 1.9 million across Ghana. It provides participants with industry-relevant technical skills and soft skills including entrepreneurship, communication, leadership, and financial literacy, with the Mastercard Foundation funding making it entirely free for eligible participants aged 18 to 35.

DTI has set a target of training 3,250 interns in 2026 as part of a broader three-year plan to reach 6,000 young Ghanaians across seven centres in Greater Accra, Tamale, Ho, and Kumasi. Enrollment for the next cohort at KTI is currently open at pqi.dtiafrica.com.

Ghana-Germany Poultry Deal in Kpone Takes Aim at a US$400m Import Bill

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A Ghanaian agribusiness firm and its German partner have launched two landmark facilities at Kpone-Katamanso in the Greater Accra Region, opening a new chapter in the country’s fight to cut an annual poultry import bill that is draining between 300 million and 400 million United States dollars from the economy each year.

Beacon Source and Services Limited and Germany’s Bostex Trading GmbH commissioned an expanded 3,000-tonne cold storage facility and broke ground for a poultry value addition and processing complex in a ceremony attended by government ministers, the German Ambassador to Ghana, and representatives of the German Chamber of Commerce. The Agriculture Minister, Eric Opoku, presided over both events.

Minister Opoku described the facilities as strategic investments in Ghana’s food security architecture and a strong vote of confidence in the country’s poultry sector, praising the Ghana-Germany partnership for its potential to facilitate technology transfer, adherence to international standards, and improved competitiveness. He called on financial institutions, development partners, and private investors to back similar initiatives nationwide.

Presidential Adviser on the 24-Hour Economy and Accelerated Export Development, Augustus Tanoh, pointed out that frozen poultry is the third highest food import into Ghana after cereals and animal offal, making the Beacon investment a direct strategic response to a well-documented structural weakness in the domestic supply chain.

The twin projects are anchored within the government’s Feed Ghana Programme and the Poultry Industry Revitalisation sub-programme, which targets structural challenges including high feed costs, weak value-chain coordination, limited access to quality day-old chicks, inadequate veterinary services, and insufficient processing and cold-chain infrastructure. The broader strategy links feed production, hatcheries, farming, processing, and cold storage into an integrated value chain aligned with the 24-Hour Economy framework.

Beacon Source and Services Limited Managing Director Fidelis Kpeglar said the expansion reflects a phased long-term vision, from value-added processing to product diversification and ultimately a fully integrated poultry and cold-chain hub. He noted that the partnership with Bostex GmbH, which financed Phase I of the cold storage facility and is supporting Phase II, has evolved from a conventional trading arrangement into a strategic collaboration built on shared long-term vision.

German Ambassador to Ghana Frederik Landshoft said the projects would strengthen Ghana’s resilience, reduce import dependence, and contribute to food security and economic sovereignty, describing the investment as closely aligned with Ghana’s agricultural and industrial priorities.

A national poultry sector masterplan, expected to be finalised in 2026, will serve as the broader policy roadmap to boost production, enhance competitiveness, reduce import reliance, and attract both public and private investment across the full poultry value chain.

Ghanaian Economist Warns Africa: Export Bans Are Not Industrial Policy

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A Ghanaian economist has delivered a sharp warning to African governments at the continent’s most influential mining conference, cautioning that banning raw mineral exports without first building the infrastructure to process them will simply reroute trade rather than create the factories and jobs governments are promising their citizens.

Theophilus Acheampong, technical adviser to Ghana’s Ministry of Finance, made the remarks during a panel discussion at the 2026 Investing in African Mining Indaba held in Cape Town, South Africa, from February 9 to 12, where the geopolitical scramble for Africa’s lithium, cobalt, manganese, and rare earths dominated the agenda.

Speaking at a session that brought together senior representatives from the United States Department of Energy, the African Legal Support Facility, and major mining investors, Acheampong argued that Africa’s future will depend more on governance and strategy than on geology alone. The continent holds approximately 40 percent of global proven critical mineral reserves, yet its share of global exploration spending has declined from around 16 percent a decade ago to roughly 10 percent today, a trend panellists linked directly to policy instability and investor caution.

Acheampong’s core argument was direct: prohibiting the export of raw minerals does not automatically create factories, jobs, or technology transfer. For value addition to happen sustainably, he explained, a country must first have reliable and affordable power, efficient transport and port logistics, skilled labour and technical expertise, access to affordable capital, and guaranteed market access. Without these foundations, an export ban may choke supply chains rather than deepen them.

“African governments should stop confusing export bans with industrial policy. Bans do not automatically translate into value addition without power, logistics, skills, and investable market access; they simply shift trade routes or delay investments,” he said.

Instead, Acheampong called for leverage to be negotiated strategically through structured partnerships, technology transfer agreements, and phased localisation targets, rather than imposed through blanket export prohibitions.

He also urged African governments to anchor their strategies internally rather than depend on foreign powers to deliver development outcomes. “If history has taught us anything, it is the fact that often you cannot rely on other external partners to deliver your country for yourselves. You have to build the institutions at home, and you have to be clear about what you want to achieve,” he said.

The broader conference consensus echoed this message. Speakers across sessions acknowledged that Africa cannot succeed alone and that the balance between strengthened national regulations and legal certainty for investors is crucial to attracting the capital needed to develop local processing capacity.

Burkina Faso Deaths Expose the True Cost of Ghana’s Tomato Import Addiction

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Ghana is haemorrhaging GH¢5.7 billion every year from a broken tomato sector, and now the human cost of that failure is being counted in lives lost on treacherous cross-border supply routes, the Chamber of Agribusiness Ghana (CAG) has warned, as it launched a sweeping five-year rescue plan for the industry.

The Chamber disclosed that Ghana spends between GH¢650 million and GH¢760 million annually importing fresh tomatoes and tomato paste, making the country the world’s second-largest importer of tomato paste after Germany. The losses, equivalent to 1.2 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), are compounded by post-harvest spoilage that destroys between 30 and 45 percent of locally grown tomatoes each year due to inadequate cold storage, amounting to a further GH¢175 million to GH¢250 million in wasted produce.

The Chamber described the situation as a national emergency. Anthony Morrison, Chief Executive Officer of the Chamber, said the country is sacrificing not just money but lives. “We are not just losing foreign exchange; we are losing an entire generation’s employment opportunities. The recent security incident in Burkina Faso is a wake-up call. We cannot continue to sacrifice Ghanaian lives and livelihoods for tomatoes we can grow better and cheaper at home,” he said.

A trader added her voice to the crisis, saying: “We risk our lives because there are not enough quality tomatoes produced in Ghana. This strategy will finally make it possible to trade safely within Ghana’s borders while creating prosperity for all of us.”

The Chamber’s National Tomato Production Strategy for 2026 to 2030 targets a dramatic reduction in tomato paste imports from more than 100 million dollars annually to just 20 million dollars by 2030, while increasing the use of locally grown tomatoes by processors from 7 percent to 85 percent. The plan calls for the construction of 50 cold storage facilities with a combined capacity of 150,000 metric tonnes, and projects annual economic gains of more than GH¢5 billion by 2030 through combined import savings, increased tax revenues, and wages recirculated within the domestic economy.

Implementation steps include presenting the strategy to the President and Cabinet for approval, establishing a national steering committee, opening a youth registration portal, and beginning construction of the first ten cold storage facilities in the second quarter of 2026, alongside emergency financial support for families affected by recent cross-border trading incidents.

The GH¢3.2 billion strategy aims to create approximately 200,000 jobs for young Ghanaians across farming, processing, cold-chain management, logistics, and agribusiness entrepreneurship, while establishing a GH¢200 million Youth Agri-Entrepreneurship Fund to support youth-led tomato businesses.

Beyond import bills and spoilage, the CAG calculates that GH¢4.5 billion in potential wages currently flows to foreign processors and farmers rather than to Ghanaian workers, compounding the sector’s drag on the broader economy.

AfCFTA Chief Puts Digital Trade at Heart of Africa’s Sovereignty Push

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African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretary-General His Excellency Wamkele Mene has declared that building a fully interoperable and integrated African digital economy is no longer a distant aspiration but an immediate operational imperative, urging the continent to stop deliberating and start executing.

Mene made the remarks during a fireside chat at the Accra Reset’s Addis Reckoning, a high-level side event held on the margins of the 39th African Union (AU) Assembly of Heads of State and Government in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The gathering brought together government officials, private sector leaders, international partners, and civil society representatives to chart a bold, action-oriented path toward African prosperity.

Speaking at the event, Mene spotlighted the AfCFTA’s Digital Trade Protocol as a driver of a projected 712 billion dollar African digital economy by 2050, and highlighted practical tools including local currency payment systems to eliminate conversion costs, an AfCFTA Hub designed for micro, small and medium enterprise (MSME) inclusion, and interoperable systems built to preserve national sovereignty. “Eliminate this cost of currency convertibility to ignite small and medium enterprise capacity,” he said.

President Mahama, who chaired the closing session, credited Mene’s intervention for crystallising the case for urgent intra-African payment reform. “One of the issues he raised was why, as an SME in Accra or Ghana, I want to export my goods to my compatriots in Kenya, and yet I must convert my local currency into a third-party currency, then exchange it again to pay my colleague SME in Kenya,” Mahama recounted. “So, the Pan-African payment and settlement system is a thing whose time has come, and with urgency.”

The Accra Reset is an initiative championed by President John Dramani Mahama of Ghana to reimagine global governance frameworks for health, development, and economic sovereignty in the era after the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). At the summit, Mahama announced sweeping reforms including plans for Ghana to purchase its cocoa in domestic currency and to cease the export of raw mineral ores from 2030.

Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo commended Mahama for championing the Accra Reset agenda, describing it as an important tool for advancing Africa’s self-reliance. Former Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and former AU Chairperson Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma were also among the prominent voices at the event, with Dlamini-Zuma stressing that intra-African trade remains stuck at around 16 percent of the continent’s total trade, and calling for an African passport and pan-African payment systems as non-negotiable priorities.

President Mahama closed the session by calling for a coalition of the willing to drive reforms quickly, warning that the continent cannot afford its familiar pattern of ambitious frameworks without urgent implementation. “We come with the decisions. We agree. We do the frameworks. What is missing is urgency and implementation,” he said.