
Mrs Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, Foreign Minister
The Minister of Foreign of Affairs and Regional Integration, Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, has met with the UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, in New York to discuss the security situation in the Sahel and West Africa as well as ways to mobilize funding for peace operations in Africa.
The meeting, which was held behind closed-doors, was also attended by three other senior Ghanaian foreign ministry officials.
It was the first such meeting since Ghana took a seat on the 15-member Security Council on January 1, this year.
Ghana was elected last June for two years, alongside Brazil, United Arab Emirates, Gabon and Albania to join five other non-permanent members, including Kenya, who have a year left of their tenure.
Peace and security
Restoring peace and security in the Sahel and West Africa, and ending piracy in the Gulf of Guinea are two of the major problems on the continent, which Ghana wants to galvanize the Security Council’s attention and international resources to resolve.
Ghana chairs the African Union (AU) Peace and Security Council as well as the Council of ECOWAS Heads of State.
Ms. Botchwey also participated in the UN Security Council’s first debate of this year, the maiden one for Ghana in this fourth tenure on the Council since independence in 1957.
Gender-based violence
The debate on “Women, Peace and Security,” presided over by Norwegian Foreign Minister Anniken Huitfeldt, addressed the threats and violence women in particular faced when, ironically, they were working for peace.
The debate topic is of particular relevance to Ghana because the country is the ninth leading contributor of personnel to UN peace-keeping operations in which an increasing number of Ghanaian women are deployed.
In 2020, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) verified 35 cases in which women involved in peace and security work were killed.
They included human rights activists, journalists and trade unionists in seven conflict-affected countries. Academics, judges, youth and civil society activists also suffered violence, the report said.
Ms. Botchwey said Ghana was concerned that those who gave their time to make the world a better place were rather threatened saying; “the Council can always count on Ghana’s unwavering support.”
She said the Ghana Armed Forces and other security institutions were reviewing regulations to ensure they were women-friendly.
As of April 2020, more than a quarter of Ghanaian police and 14 per cent of its military personnel sent on UN and African Union peace operations were women.
“Women are usually the most adversely affected by conflict but the most marginalised in peace processes, and the most punished for their peace-building efforts”, she said.
“Therefore, ensuring the full, equal and meaningful participation of women in peace-building should not be reduced to mere rhetoric within the confines of the Security Council.
“We owe it to women in peace and security all over the world to convert the rhetoric into zealous and concrete action,”
Ghana-UK Relations
Earlier in the week, Ms. Botchwey met in London with British Minister for Africa Vicky Ford and Lord Tariq Ahmad, Minister for South Asia, UN and Commonwealth, for bilateral talks.
They discussed mutual co-operation on the Security Council, trade and investment promotion between Ghanaian and British businesses, and Covid-19 vaccine supply.
Ms. Botchwey thanked the UK government for a recent donation of 1.6 million vaccines, with the reminder that sharing vaccines was key to ending further mutations of the covid-19 virus.