10th October 2005
Dear Mr. Salam Mahama,
From these meetings, visits and a statement, which was later obtained from one Martin Kyere, a Ghanaian on the canoe who managed to escape to Senegal and was later brought down by the Ministry to Ghana, the delegation came to certain conclusions, which were made public in the Foreign Minister?s press conference held on Tuesday, August 16th, 2005 after the return of the delegation to Accra. These conclusions, which were conveyed by memo by the Foreign Minister to the President of the Republic on 22nd August 2005, were also communicated by the Foreign Minister to his Gambian counterpart in another letter dated 25th August 2005.
It may be recalled that during the delegation?s meeting with the Gambian President, the latter promised to institute a full-scale investigation into the circumstances of the mysterious deaths of our compatriots and the whereabouts of those unaccounted for.
The Minister had occasion after the meetings in Banjul to brief the Ghanaian community and their elders in The Gambia about the various initiatives Government was and would be pursuing on this sad development. He assured them that no matter how long it takes, Government is determined to get to the bottom of this matter, an assurance that was warmly welcomed by the community.
The Minister has also written on 2nd September 2005 to his counterparts in the countries whose nationals too allegedly boarded the canoe in The Gambia, i.e. the Foreign Ministers of Nigeria, Togo, Senegal and Cote d?Ivoire, so that their relevant authorities could also pursue this matter as far as their nationals were concerned. It is the information provided by the Foreign Minister which alerted the Governments of these countries to this tragic development.
Further to that, the Foreign Ministry has also received the autopsy reports of those who were found dead in The Gambia. The Minister has since communicated with his Gambian counterpart, seeking further clarifications about certain aspects of the reports.
It needs also to be mentioned that on the sidelines of the 60th Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, the President of the Republic, His Excellency Mr. J.A. Kufuor, met his Gambian counterpart on 17th September 2005 to discuss matters of mutual concern, including the deaths and disappearances of the Ghanaian nationals in The Gambia. During that meeting, the Gambian President agreed to allow Ghanaian investigators to join the Gambian team investigating the matter. This has been the subject of yet another letter, dated 29th September 2005, from the Foreign Minister to his Gambian counterpart. Ghanaian investigators will very soon leave for The Gambia for this purpose. In the meanwhile, the Dakar Mission, which is in touch with the Ghanaian community in Banjul, is carefully compiling an accurate list of those Ghanaians who undertook the ill-fated journey.
As you can see, Government is quietly but vigorously pressing for answers to the questions posed by this tragedy. It will not, however, play to the gallery as it considers Ghanaian citizenship too precious a commodity to be the object of demagoguery or opportunism. Government intends to go about this delicate situation, involving the activities of law enforcement agencies of a sovereign sister ECOWAS country, systematically and purposefully so that the truth of this affair will be laid bare and its logical consequences realised.
The Foreign Minister, Nana Akufo-Addo, shares fully the vision of Government that Ghanaian citizenship has a value which cannot be quantified, but the defence of which is the most fundamental obligation of any responsible and self-respecting government.
Yours sincerely,
AMBASSADOR KOBINA WUDU
ACTING CHIEF DIRECTOR