BFF-22 Ghana: Five things to know

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BFF-22

GHANA-VOTE-POLITICS

Ghana: Five things to know

ACCRA, Dec 7, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Seen as a beacon of hope and stability in a
turbulent region, Ghana is a major producer and exporter of gold, cocoa and
oil. – Top gold producer –

The West African nation — once called the Gold Coast — overtook South
Africa last year to become the continent’s biggest producer of the precious
metal.

It is also the world’s second-biggest producer of cocoa after Ivory Coast,
with more than a fifth of the market. It also exports oil, diamonds, bauxite
and manganese.

Once hailed as a regional growth model, it was forced to turn to the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 2015 for a bailout as global commodity
prices tanked.

Nearly a quarter of Ghana’s 30 million population — which has tripled
since the 1970s — live in poverty, with per capita income at $2,220 (1,827
euros).

Growth for 2020 is expected to fall to its lowest in 30 years, to 0.9
percent according to the International Monetary Fund, a steep decline from
6.5 percent growth in 2019.

Ghanaians also suffer from inflation and lack of infrastructure,
especially sanitation, as well as regular power blackouts.

– Independence pioneer –

In 1957, Ghana became the first sub-Saharan African state to win
independence under nationalist leader Kwame Nkrumah.

After Nkrumah, the most influential of the former British colony’s leaders
has been Jerry Rawlings, who came to power as an air force captain in 1979.

Although he mounted a second coup in 1981 after allowing elections,
Rawlings — who died on November 12 — brought in a constitution that has
proved a stable basis for democratic rule.

The World Bank has hailed it for taking “major strides toward democracy
under a multi-party system, with its independent judiciary winning public
trust.”

In 2019, Ghana cracked down on separatists who were preparing to declare
their own nation, “Western Togoland”, in the eastern Volta region bordering
Togo.

– Ashanti kingdom –

Modern-day Ghana is home to the Ashanti people, a nation and ethnic group
which has wielded power in the region for over 300 years.

Built on gold, the Ashanti empire extended into neighbouring countries and
fiercely resisted British colonial rule.

Ashanti monarchs still preside over an area containing around five million
people that is roughly the size of Great Britain.

– Diplomacy –

Ghana has played an important role in mediating in wars and crises that
have affected its neighbours.

As chairman of the region’s Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS), Ghana’s President Nana Akufo-Addo worked to resolve the recent
political crisis in Mali.

The late Kofi Annan, a Ghanaian, was the first black African to lead the
United Nations and won the Nobel Peace Prize for his nine-year tenure that
ended in 2006.

Barack Obama chose Ghana for his first visit to sub-Saharan Africa in 2009
after his election as US president.

– Slave trade bastion –

Cape Coast, the former European colonial capital, was once the largest
slave-trading centre in West Africa from where slaves were shipped to North
and South America and the Caribbean.

Now a fishing village, it has become a major tourist attraction since
Obama visited with his family.

Akufo-Addo designated 2019 the “Year of Return” to commemorate the 400th
anniversary of the first recorded landing of a ship carrying Africans to the
US and to encourage their descendants to “come home”.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 1325 hrs