The Minority Caucus in parliament has accused Foreign Affairs Minister, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, of reckless diplomacy they say has pushed Ghana onto a United States list of countries facing an indefinite pause in immigrant visa processing, with potentially devastating economic consequences.
Addressing an emergency press conference in Accra on Tuesday, January 20, 2026 the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Minority Caucus described the U.S. decision as a national embarrassment and warned that it threatens billions of dollars in annual remittances, fractures family reunification efforts and undermines Ghana’s hard-earned reputation as a stable and reliable international partner.
The Minority said the January 13, 2026 announcement by the U.S. Department of State has left Ghana in “ignominious company,” a situation it argued is wholly inconsistent with the country’s long-standing record of honouring international obligations.
“This is not a technical inconvenience that can be explained away. This decision translates into families separated, careers frozen and livelihoods placed in limbo.”
Economic Lifeline Under Threat
At the heart of the Minority’s concern is the potential impact on Diaspora remittances, a pillar of Ghana’s economy.
According to the Committee, Ghanaians abroad remit between $3.7 billion and $6.6 billion annually, with the United States accounting for the largest share.
“These are not loans or aid. They are the sweat and sacrifice of Ghanaians abroad, sustaining families, paying school fees, covering medical bills and keeping businesses alive,” the Minority stressed.
The visa pause, they warned, risks choking this lifeline by preventing lawful migration and family reunification that underpin stable employment and regular remittance flows.
Minister in the Firing Line
In an unusually blunt language, the Minority laid the blame squarely at the feet of Mr. Okudzeto Ablakwa, accusing him of prioritising public confrontation and social media theatrics over quiet, professional diplomacy.
They argued that long-standing technical issues raised by Washington, particularly around deportation cooperation, documentation and consular engagement, should have been handled through sustained behind-the-scenes engagement with U.S. authorities.
Instead, the Minority said the Minister chose public rebuttals and confrontational rhetoric, failing to anticipate the likely consequences under an administration known for using visa restrictions as leverage.
“He chose theatre over diplomacy,” the Committee charged, warning that such an approach inevitably attracts punitive responses.
Israel Deportation
The Minority also cited the December 2025 Israel deportation incident as evidence of what it described as a dangerous pattern of escalation.
Following the deportation of three Ghanaians from Israel and the detention of members of a Ghanaian parliamentary delegation, the Foreign Minister ordered the immediate deportation of Israeli nationals from Accra, publicly framing the move as reciprocal action.
While acknowledging Ghana’s right to defend the dignity of its citizens, the Minority described the response as impulsive and diplomatically unsound.
“It was not strength; it was petulance,” the Committee said, warning that turning ordinary travellers into bargaining chips damages trust and portrays Ghana as unpredictable.
The Minority questioned how Ghana could move from being praised by the European Union as a strategic partner to being flagged by Washington as a migration risk within months.
According to the Committee, the shift reflects not a decline in Ghana’s credibility, but a failure of diplomatic strategy and execution. They argued that Ghana should have mobilised European allies and leveraged trade and security partnerships to buffer against punitive measures.
Instead, they said, unilateral posturing and absolutist public positions made allied advocacy difficult, leaving Ghana exposed.
The Minority extended its criticism to Ghana’s Ambassador to the United States, Victor Emmanuel Smith, accusing him of failing to engage decisively with U.S. officials at a critical moment.
They alleged that the Ambassador had been distracted by domestic political messaging rather than lobbying Congress, the State Department and relevant agencies to avert or reverse the visa freeze, and called for his immediate recall.
Demands and Call for Removal
The Minority issued a series of demands, including a full public briefing by the Foreign Ministry within seven days on communications with the United States, disclosure of the reasons Ghana was placed on the list, and a clear strategy for securing removal.
They also called for the establishment of a high-level technical working group with U.S. authorities, the withdrawal of any “tit-for-tat” deportation policy, and the appointment of a special envoy on diaspora and migration affairs.
Most significantly, the Minority formally called on President John Mahama to remove Mr. Okudzeto Ablakwa from office, arguing that the national interest demands a change in leadership at the Foreign Ministry.
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The post Reckless Diplomacy Has Cost Ghana Billions -Minority appeared first on The Ghanaian Chronicle.
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