Tuesday, March 3, 2026
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HomenewsGhana and Burkina Faso forge closer ties, sign seven key agreements to...

Ghana and Burkina Faso forge closer ties, sign seven key agreements to bolster security and cooperation

In a significant diplomatic breakthrough, Ghana and the Republic of Burkina Faso have agreed to reset and deepen their bilateral relations, signing seven new agreements and reactivating a long-dormant joint commission. The development follows two days of high-level talks between the countries’ foreign ministers in Ouagadougou.

Ghana’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, described the discussions with his counterpart, Karamoko Jean-Marie Traoré, and the Burkinabè Prime Minister, Rimtalba Jean Emmanuel Ouédraogo, as “frank, constructive, and forward-looking.”

The highlight of the visit was the revival of the Permanent Joint Commission for Cooperation (PJCC), a crucial bilateral platform that had been inactive for six years. The move builds on previous engagements between Ghanaian President John Mahama and Burkina Faso’s leader, Captain Ibrahim Traoré, in early 2025.

A United Front Against Terrorism

With the Sahel region grappling with escalating extremist violence, security topped the agenda. Both nations condemned recent terror attacks and expressed solidarity with affected families. In a decisive move, they agreed to design and adopt a new, collaborative security framework aimed at neutralizing the threat of terrorism and violent extremism along their shared border.

“The governments of Ghana and Burkina Faso have agreed to further deepen our exceptionally cordial relations,” Mr. Ablakwa stated. “We… decided to design and adopt a new security framework aimed at neutralizing the scourge of terrorism and violent extremism.”

Seven Agreements to Transform Cross-Border Relations

Beyond security, the reactivated PJCC session yielded seven signed agreements designed to improve the lives of citizens on both sides of the border. These legally binding pacts cover a wide spectrum of cooperation:

  1. Mutual Recognition of National Driver’s Licenses: This will ease the movement of people and goods by allowing drivers from one country to use their licenses in the other.
  2. Transport and Road Transit Agreement: Aims to streamline the movement of cargo and vehicles across borders, boosting trade and reducing bottlenecks.
  3. Framework Agreement on Cross-Border Cooperation: Establishes a formal structure for collaboration between local authorities, communities, and businesses in border regions.
  4. Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on Border Administrative Authorities: Creates a platform for regular consultations between local officials to address day-to-day administrative issues.
  5. MoU on a Joint Border Reaffirmation Commission: Provides for a technical committee to work together on clearly demarcating and reaffirming the international boundary between the two nations.
  6. Cooperation Agreement on Disaster Management: A critical new partnership focused on preventing and managing humanitarian crises, with an immediate priority on mitigating the devastating floods caused by the annual spillage of Burkina Faso’s Bagré Dam, which historically affects communities in northern Ghana.
  7. Anti-Narcotics and Crime Agreement: A pact to enhance collaboration in fighting the illicit cultivation, production, trafficking, and abuse of narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances.

Addressing the ‘Bagré Dam’ Challenge

A particularly significant aspect of the new partnership is the explicit focus on disaster management. The perennial spillage of the Bagré Dam has long been a source of tension and hardship, causing severe flooding in Ghana’s Upper East Region. The new agreement signals a joint commitment to finding a lasting solution to this recurring humanitarian challenge.

“We have also established a new partnership on disaster management which will particularly enhance our capacity to deal with the perennial Bagré Dam spillage and its hitherto devastating consequences,” Mr. Ablakwa noted.

The Ghanaian minister concluded his visit by expressing heartfelt gratitude to the Burkinabè government for their warm hospitality, reaffirming Ghana’s commitment to a “fantastic” and mutually beneficial relationship.

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