Nana Akufo-Addo of Ghana visits acting President Osinbanjo in Lagos
Yemi
Osinbajo, the Acting President of Nigeria on Sunday evening welcomed the
visiting President of Ghana, Nana Akufo-Addo, to Akinola Aguda House, his
official residence.
During the
meeting that followed, the two leaders highlighted the critical role that
Nigeria and Ghana play as the “centrepiece” of ECOWAS and the West African
sub-region.
President
Akufo-Addo thanked Acting President Osinbajo for receiving his delegation on a
special day, when Nigeria was commemorating Eid El-Fitr. He said that his visit
was part of an ongoing tour of the sub-region to “take stock of what’s going
on, and to renew relations.”
Acting
President Osinbajo on his part thanked the Ghanaian President for visiting
Nigeria, adding, “We’re extremely excited about the ECOWAS sub-region and hope
that we will be able to do a lot together.”
Discussions
between the two leaders touched on the forthcoming African Union (AU) Summit in
Addis Ababa, ongoing negotiations on the Continental Free Trade Agreement
(CFTA), and the revitalization of the Ghana-Nigeria Permanent Joint Commission
for Cooperation. Both leaders pledged to intensify bilateral cooperation for
the benefit and development of the sub-region.
The Ghanaian
President also extended his good wishes to President Muhammadu Buhari.
Members of
the President Akufo-Addo’s delegation included Ghana’s Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Shirley Ayorkor Botchway; Minister of National Security, Albert Kan
Dapaah; and officials of the Foreign Ministry.
Earlier on
Sunday, Mr. Osinbajo hosted a delegation of religious and traditional leaders
and senior government officials to commemorate Eid El-Fitr, the end of Ramadan.
In his
remarks at the ceremony, he stressed the importance and necessity of interfaith
unity as a prerequisite for guaranteeing the peace and prosperity of Nigeria.
According to
him, “what the Government of President Muhammadu Buhari has always emphasised
is the unity of the faiths. There is every reason for us to work together as brothers
and sisters despite our different faiths.”
Speaking
further on the imperative of unity across Nigeria’s ethnic and religious lines,
Mr. Osinbajo noted: “When you look at the hundreds of thousands of our people
everywhere in this country — and I’ve been around this country — poverty is the
same. It doesn’t wear a different face whether you’re poor in Lagos, or you’re
poor in Sokoto or you’re poor in Aba, poverty is the same; hunger is the same,
wherever you are. If you’re hungry you’re hungry, your religion doesn’t matter.
Your ethnicity doesn’t matter. And that is why for us, it is so important that
we work together to make sure that our country is able to take care of millions
of its people.”
He recalled
and reiterated the message of unity in President Buhari’s Eid El-Fitr message
to Nigerians, in which the president urged that Nigerians “should all resolve
to live in peace and unity in our great country, which is the envy of many less
endowed nations.”
According to
the acting president, “We are a geopolitical power because of our strength in
numbers and our diversity. That’s why we’re a geopolitical power. Our relevance
comes from our size, the size of our market, and our diversity, and the fact
that anywhere you go, Nigerians are probably the smartest people you’ll ever
meet anywhere.”
Department
of State Services, and Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission; FCT Area Council Chairmen, and senior officials of the Federal
Capital Territory Administration, FCTA.
Comments