US President Obama to visit Ghana
Masahudu Ankiilu
Kunateh, Ghanadot
Accra, May 18, Ghanadot -
The
President of United States of
America,
Barack Obama
will make a historic visit to
Ghana from
Friday July 10 to Saturday July 11, 2009.
He will be accompanied by his wife Mrs.
Michelle Obama and other key government officials.
|
President Obama
(M) Ex-President Bush (R) |
According to Ghana’s Foreign Ministry, the
first Black US President will hold bilateral talks with
Ghanaian President, John Evans Atta Mills aimed at
strengthening the fraternal relations existing between the
two countries.
The visit, the
first trip to Sub-Sahara
Africa by
President Obama and wife Michelle Obama since
assumption of office, will be
symbolic to advance the strategic role Ghana
is used to playing on the world
stage for Africa.
It is an indication of strong
democratic governance and freedom that thrives
in the fibre of Ghanaian society.
It is also a manifestation of the fundamental
role that governments of the past
and non-governmental organizations have played in molding
Ghana as a success story on the African continent.
Talking to the
public, Ghanadot got the
impression that Ghanaians want their government to take this
opportunity to make the
African-American President personally aware of the most
challenging issues confronting the nation and the African
continent.
They said
is important that, we make clear
cut statements of our needs with
specific time frame and budget to achieve
such goals. Simply asking for support without plan,
action and budget will be noise
to the ears of the US President.
Meanwhile, some civil society organizations
like the Volunteers Partnership for West Africa are urging
the Ghanaian government to use the visit to further solicit
support for a number of activities initiated by the Former
US President George Bush in the country.
They claimed that
for those in the civil society,
especially campaigning for
Malaria Eradication
in Ghana and Africa,
White House Press Releases indicate
that President Obama will highlight
critical role that ‘’good
governance and civil society play in promoting
development’’ and this affords them then
opportunity to make their voice
heard by requesting for new and refreshing
approaches for tackling
malaria through the President Malaria
Initiative (PMI) put in motion by
George Bush, the former President of the
United States.
It is estimated that, Ghana alone will be
receiving a $ 17million grant this year from PMI towards
malaria projects and it is time we call for proper
usage of the US tax payer’s money
on malaria in Ghana and Africa while urging African
governments to adopt policies that
are geared towards eradication of
the disease which kills 1 person every 2 hours on average in
Ghana and 2 people per minute globally with 90% of this
deaths occurring in black Africa.
The civil society
organizations are saying that it is instructive to
point to the US President under
whose authority the PMI is been managed to consider adopting
strategies that his country used after the second world war
in eradicating the disease in America to
also do the same for the
African continent rather than going the conventional ways
which has failed over the years hence the
increase in malaria deaths
for instance in 2007 in Ghana as cited by
the WHO.
Ghana, they said,
should take lead as it has always done in difficult times on
the continent to move from policies of controlling the
disease to policies of eradicating the disease since it is
that which will propel a change in donor rules
for controlling the disease which
has failed and continues to fail to a more compelling
eradication policy.
Some of the strategies these NGOs are
recommending are
holistic in
approach; investment
in treating people with existing
malaria parasite, aerial insecticide dispersal,
and intensive public education on the
disease. This approach
should help Ghana to eradicate the disease within
three years,
they claim.
Ghanadot