No More Special Treatment for Ghanaian Leaders
Former presidents,
lawmakers and senior government officials in Ghana will no longer have special
privileges for private travel to the United States, Washington’s envoy has
said.
Until now, such individuals
were able to take advantage of “protocol services” where they did not have to
physically appear at the US embassy to obtain a visa.
But on Thursday, US
Ambassador Robert Jackson told members of parliament that the process had
changed, sources in the legislature said.
“If you are travelling
for tourism or business that is not related to government business, you will be
required to make a personal appearance, even with former presidents,” he said.
“There are no
exceptions.”
The withdrawal of protocol
privileges comes two months after Britain’s top diplomat in Accra accused three
MPs and a former lawmaker of visa fraud in a letter to Ghana’s parliament,
raising the prospect of a travel ban.
The allegations
included visa overstays for family members, in some cases for several years,
after they used diplomatic channels for travel on non-official business.
Britain’s outgoing high
commissioner Jon Benjamin said MPs wanting to make private visits now had to
apply “like any other applicant”.
It was not clear what
prompted the US ban but it is understood all foreign missions were aware of the
British investigation into visa irregularities involving MPs.
Contacted by AFP, the
US embassy in Accra gave no immediate response.
The US decision is not
thought to be connected to a Ghanaian Supreme Court ruling on Thursday on two
former Guantanamo Bay detainees.
The court ruled that
the 2016 transfer of the pair from the US detention facility to live in Ghana
was unconstitutional.
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