Foreign Affairs respond to mistreatment of Ghanaians at embassies

Foreign Affairs respond to mistreatment of Ghanaians at embassies

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration has responded to a petition filed by the Consumer Protection Agency(CPA) over the complaints of mistreatment at the various foreign embassies in the country.
Below is the full statement read by Kofi Capito, the Executive Secretary of CPA at a press conference in Accra

PRESS STATEMENT  ON THE RESPONSE BY THE MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS ON THE ABUSE OF GHANAIANS BY FOREIGN MISSIONS IN GHANA.

Sometime in June 2017, the CPA upon receiving numerous complaints from the Ghanaian public about the unfair, disrespect and abuse by some foreign embassies in Ghana. The CPA wrote a petition to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs about these complaints. We are grateful to the Honourable Minister Shirley Ayorkor Botchway for taking her time to engage some of the Foreign Embassies that the CPA raised concerns about.

On November 20th 2017, the CPA received a letter from the Ministry as to the response from some of the embassies.

The CPA’s complaints were as follows;

British High Commission

American embassy

The People’s Republic of ChinaThe Chinese have made it so difficult for the Ghanaian businessman who has travelled on numerous occasions unable to access Chinese visas unless through agents who collect between $500 to $1000 to facilitate the process.

Other embassies like the Canadian, French, Danish, Italian and most of the other Embassies treat Ghanaians as second class citizens in our own country.

The CPA is happy that the Parliamentary Select Committee on Foreign Affairs raised a similar concern on behalf of their constituents.

Diplomacy, which is supposed to be reciprocal between countries for free movement is very difficult for the Ghanaian traveler

If Foreign Nationals do not go through same treatment when they visit Ghanaian Embassies abroad, the CPA thinks that Ghanaians in Ghana should be treated same by these Foreign Embassies in Ghana.

This is the response from

  1.             The American Embassy
  1.             The People’s Republic of ChinaThe mission denied allegations about the embassy’s involvement with the use of middlemen and agents who charge up to one thousand US Dollars (US$1,000) to assist applicants obtain visa

The Mission has introduced a mechanism of credible guarantee letters and the cancelling of visa records after the applicant returns from China, effective form 1st November 2017. This Embassy has explained is designed to facilitate visa application by applicants of key Ghanaian government departments, major enterprises, universities and research institutions to enable them apply for visas to china without the presentation of duly authorized invitation letters.

 III.            The British High Commission

Upon our checks, these practices are still unchanged. The CPA is taking the opportunity to plead on behalf o f Ghanaians that the government of Ghana through its agents in charge of Foreign Affairs; The Honourable Minister of Foreign Affairs to engage these Foreign Embassies to desist from disrespecting Ghanaians.

The CPA would wait to hear or see the little changes accepted by the embassies being implemented.

Ghanaians are very anxious to take to the street to demonstrate.

We look forward to your cooperation in upholding our rights as citizens of this country.

Thank you.

Source:happyghana.com

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