U.S. threatens Ghana for non-compliance with deportation of 7,000 Ghanaians

U.S. Ambassador Robert P. Jackson welcoming guests to a reception at his residence in Accra, Ghana.

The United States government has issued visa restriction threats to Ghana for failure to issue travel documents to over 7000 Ghanaian citizens awaiting deportation from the U.S.

The U.S. Embassy in Ghana issued the threats in a statement on Thursday explaining that the Ghana government failed to meet its ICAO [International Civil Aviation Organisation] obligation regarding the regular issuance of travel documents.

Since December 2016, “the U.S. government has repeatedly engaged the Government of Ghana in both Washington, D.C., and Accra and has urged the government to abide by its international obligations and issue the necessary travel documents so that Ghanaians under deportation orders may depart the United States on commercial flights.

“If Ghana fails to comply with international obligations regarding the issuance of travel documents, the United States may be forced to begin implementing visa restrictions on Ghana, in accordance with U.S. law,” said the Public Affairs department of the U.S Embassy.

The threats follow the U.S. ambassador to Ghana, Robert P. Jackson’s revelation last week that over 7,000 Ghanaians were in the process of being deported from the U.S. for various immigration offences.

“First, we are talking about 7,000, not 60,000 Ghanaians who are in various stages of being deported from the United States and on that issue just as we have a responsibility to patrol our borders, countries around the world have a responsibility to issue travel documents to their citizens so that they can return to those countries,” he said at an event in Accra.

Last year, the ambassador made similar remarks in which he said the same number of immigrants living illegally in the United States were being processed for deportation.

If the U.S. goes ahead with its threat, Ghanaian nationals, with limited exceptions, will not be issued all or specific types of visas.

Meanwhile, the U.S. Embassy’s visa restriction threats were condemned by some Ghanaian experts including a professor at the University of Ghana’s Institute of African Studies, Dr. Michael Kpessa Whyte, who said on local media Citi TV that the U.S. government is trying to incite Ghanaians against the government.

“Basically what the US is trying to do is to get the ordinary Ghanaian who goes to the embassy to queue for hours to get a visa to get upset and then get access to radio or TV or social media and begin to lambaste the government, then the government is forced to cave in and sign those documents so those Ghanaians over there could be deported,” he said.

He advised the Ghana government to take advantage of the defense agreement to be signed with the United States to prevent the Ghanaians from being deported.

Ambassador Jackson responded to the comments saying: “The statement that the embassy issued saying that Ghana could face visa sanctions is not a threat, and I don’t want it to be a threat. What I want is for the embassy of Ghana in the United States to interview one person facing deportation and issue one travel document every business day. If the Embassy does that, we will solve this problem.

“Just as Ghana deports people, the United States also has the right to deport people. I’ve been talking with the government of Ghana about this for over two years … I am acting on instructions. This is not something I am initiating. We will enforce our immigration laws,” he added.

The Ghana government is yet to make a statement on the U.S. Embassy’s claims.

This article by Ismail Akwei was first published on face2faceafrica.com

Akon is dreaming about a futuristic city in Senegal that uses cryptocurrency

Musician and entrepreneur Aliaume Damala Badara Akon Thiam, widely known as Akon, has shared his plan of building a futuristic city in Senegal that will use a cryptocurrency called Akoin – named after himself.

He made the revelation at the Cannes Lions Festival on Monday where he described the city he plans on building as a “a real-life Wakanda” in reference to the Afro-futuristic city in Marvel’s movie Black Panther.

The Akoin website said the president of Senegal had “gifted” Akon 2,000 acres of land for the planned city near the Senegalese capital of Dakar which he named Akon Crypto City.

Akon says it is the first 100% crypto-based city with AKoin at the centre of transactional life where consumers will be able to buy, hold and spend cryptocurrency straight from their smartphones, the BBC reports.

He stated also that he doesn’t know the technical aspects of the project: “I come with the concepts and let the geeks figure it out.”

For now, Akon owns a diamond mine in South Africa and a charity for underprivileged children called Konfidence Foundation.

In 2014, he returned to the continent with the Akon Lighting Africa project aimed at providing electricity by solar energy in Africa.

Together with Samba Bathily and Thione Niang, they provided electricity in 14 African countries including Guinea, Senegal, Mali, Niger, Benin, and Sierra Leone. The project also employs over 5,000 young Africans who install and maintain the solar equipment.

Born in the United States, 44-year-old Akon grew up in his home country Senegal until he was 7 years old when his family moved back to New Jersey. He spent some time in prison which influenced his music career.

His first single “Locked Up” was a worldwide hit after it was released from his debut album Trouble in 2004. He later founded two successful record labels Konvict Muzik and Kon Live Distribution.

This article by Ismail Akwei was first published on face2faceafrica.com

Brave Nigerian lawyer denied call to bar for wearing hijab gets second chance

Nigerian law school graduate Amasa Firdaus who was denied a call to the bar for allegedly refusing to remove her hijab — Photo Credit: lawyard.ng

Nigerians have received with great joy the admission into the Nigerian Bar Association of a brave hijabi law graduate who was kicked out of a call to bar ceremony in December 2017 for refusing to remove her hijab.

The graduate of the University of Ilorin, Amasa Firdaus, was denied entry into the hall and denied a call to the bar after insisting on wearing the wig on her hijab despite instructions and plea from the Nigerian Body of Benchers and colleagues respectively.

According to local media reports, Amasa Firdaus has been invited to attend the July 2018 call to bar ceremony for her admission into the Nigerian Bar Association.

This follows a case filed by the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) group which fought for the graduate’s rights, reports the News Agency of Nigeria.

They said in a statement that the Body of Benchers has decided that “Amasa Firdaus can wear a small covering over her hair for the Call to Bar ceremony in July while they deliberate on a generally appropriate dress code”.

There were also a series of social media campaigns with the hashtag #JusticeForFirdaus to allow freedom of religion and Muslim lawyers to wear hijab in the profession.

This victory for Firdaus means other law graduates can wear hijab under their wigs at the Call to Bar ceremonies. But it will take a legal provision to allow Muslim lawyers in Nigeria to wear the hijab in court.

Here are some reactions to Amasa Firdaus’ admission into the Nigerian Bar Association.

Awesome news. Hijab will now be permitted at Nigerian Call to Bar ceremonies. Well done Amasa Firdaus for not being quiet.

— Moe (@Mochievous) June 21, 2018

This article by Ismail Akwei was first published on face2faceafrica.com

If you can raise $1.5m, you will be an outright citizen of African nation Mauritius

Mauritius

The island nation Mauritius is offering its citizenship and passport to foreigners for a fee of $1 million and $500,000 to be used to boost the African nation’s sovereign wealth fund.

The decision was announced in the country’s 2018 budget by the prime minister and finance minister, Pravind Jugnauth, reports the BBC.

This forms part of measures to increase the country’s funds as the government plans to increase its budget expenditure by 5 per cent to 133.8 billion rupees ($3.8 billion) in 2018/19 fiscal year.

Foreigners who apply for citizenship will also pay $100,000 for each dependent and spouse. For the passports, applicants will have to pay $50,000 per passport for family members.

Applicants will only be considered if they satisfy some criteria laid down by the government, the report added.

The scheme which will be managed by the Economic Development Board (EDB) has been criticized by opposition politicians who believe their nation has been reduced to a commodity.

Mauritius is the only country in Africa where Hinduism is the largest religion and their currency is the rupee. The tiny island nation in the Indian Ocean off the southeast coast of Africa is so small that you can reach its four corners in one day.

The mainstay of the country’s economy is tourism and according to the latest edition of The Economist Intelligence Unit released in February, Mauritius is the only African country that is practising a full democracy as at 2017.

It is also the best country to do business in Africa. It is ranked 25th worldwide in this year’s World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business report.

This article by Ismail Akwei was first published on face2faceafrica.com

A black woman finally makes it on the world’s 500 richest people’s list

She is very popular and rich but was never on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index until this week. Media mogul and billionaire Oprah Winfrey were just announced as the first black female entrepreneur to rank among the world’s 500 richest people.

Oprah Winfrey is the 494th richest person on the list, which has only 65 women of which six are entrepreneurs.

Her fortune hit a record $4 billion on Monday thanks to the performance of Weight Watchers International Inc., with which she partnered in 2015. The weight-loss company increased her fortune by $427 million this year.

Winfrey owns other businesses including The Oprah Winfrey Show and the cable network OWN. She recently partnered with Apple to produce original content and programming for the tech company.

This milestone makes Oprah Winfrey one of the greatest black women in history.

This article by Ismail Akwei was first published on face2faceafrica.com