President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo Friday cut the ribbon to officially open the new Chancery building of the French Embassy in Accra.
The event was the first official public function the President undertook after he was sworn into office on January 7, 2021 to begin his second term as President and Commander-in-Chief of the Ghana Armed Forces for the second time.
Joined by the French Foreign Minister, Mr Jean-Yves Le Drian, President Akufo-Addo opened the building which he commissoned in 2017 to replace the Embassy’s now defunct facility that shared a wall with Ghana’s presidency.
At a short ceremony, President Akufo-Addo noted the mutual ties that Ghana and France had cultivated over the past 60 years, saying that the opening of the facility would further strengthen the bonds of friendship between both nations.
He said Ghana was appreciative of the hand of cooperation extended it by France in various sectors, including the health, education, sanitation, agriculture, transport, water and local governance, and recently when the coronavirus pandemic hit the country.
The President assured France that Ghana stood ready to “renew and deepen” her relationship with Mediterranean nation, optimistic that the two nations would continually find common grounds for collaboration.
“I have no doubt that together, our two countries can forge an even stronger partnership for the mutual benefit of our people.”
“Ghana stands ready to renew and deepen her relationship with France for the prosperity and progress of our two people and the opening of the chancery in Accra should be a sprint in our step in this direction,” he said.
Mr Le Drian said the new chancery represented “a very strong symbol, one as strong as the ties of friendship, cooperation, partnership and trust that our two countries have forged together and which continue to expand in all areas.”
He said his country was determined to make renewal of the Franco-Ghanaianpartnership a lasting one, and new chancery “stands here as a testament to this new commitment and partnership.”
The French foreign minister praised Ghana’s longstanding commitment to democratic achievements, saying his country viewed Ghana as the model of the African renaissance needed in the 21st century.
He said Ghana was considered an incubator for the invention and implementation of thenew partnership which France and Europe sought to build with your Africa, adding that his country would forge partnership that would build the common future of both nations.
Discussion about this post