Menu

My journey and walking into the future

Pressure File Photo File photo

Thu, 2 Apr 2020 Source: Abdul Razak Lukman, Contributor

Working within the ambit and spheres of diplomatic wings has a lot of barriers to observe. For me, diplomacy is the art of compromise for the mutual good of all parties. A compromise in such a way that you give what is asked without it having a greater effect on you and get what is needed for mutual good.

I remember growing up as a child, I have always dreamt about leading negotiators on behalf of my country. As an aspiring diplomat, and in many other international job contexts, I dreamt of sustaining conversations with an endless variety of people with an endless range of backgrounds and interests. I did dream of brokering peace among feuding nations/parties and walking through the best of negotiations for the resultant good of my country. My unquenching taste to know more about diplomatic protocols have driven me out of my comfort zone and into spending the little I have into worthy academic books and journals related to the field. For this reason, I have acquired reasonable knowledge in theory and not in practice. My hope is to one day put my learning into practice as I believe that one’s education is incomplete until you have the postgraduate course inexperience.

Reminiscing that in the world of developing technology and the increasing appetite for nuclear weapons and supremacy, there is no doubt that we are living in an era of conflicts and unending accusations on one another. These counter-accusations purposely meant to pull one country down and be a master of a world-leading class, has necessitated the need to foster relations by way of stationing Embassies or High Commissions in each other’s countries. These Embassies or High Commissions are headed by Ambassadors or High Commissioners of the respective countries. The Embassy and High Commission are almost the same with a very slight difference. The main difference is that the High Commission is a diplomatic mission from a Commonwealth country to another Commonwealth country. For instance, Canada, Nigeria and Britain are all members of the Commonwealth. The diplomatic mission from any of these countries to the other becomes a High Commission and the Head of the Commission is called High Commissioner. By implication, the High Commissioner of Ghana to Canada is His Excellency Nii Ayikoi Otoo. The Commonwealth is made up of 54 independent intergovernmental organizations of countries. Most of these countries are English speaking countries and thus, were once colonies of the British.

Also, the Embassy is simply a diplomatic mission from a Commonwealth country to a country that is not a member of the Commonwealth. For instance, Dawlat al Kuwayt is not a member of the Commonwealth, so the diplomatic mission from the State of Kuwait to Ghana and vice versa are Embassies. And so, by implication, the Ambassador of Ghana to Kuwait is His Excellency Yahaya Iddi Ahmed-Rufai.

Embassies and High Commissions are headed by diplomats who serve as chief negotiators between their home governments and foreign governments where they are stationed. Core duties such as drafting bilateral and multilateral agreements/arrangements embodied in treaties, conventions, protocols etc. have space in their day to day workings abroad. There are some other key areas which must not be left out by diplomats: negotiating crucial matters like foreign aid, imports/exports and telecommunication exchange control. Such areas are very dear to the economy of countries and thus, vehicle of our developmental journey. As someone having greater interests in the international-political diplomacy, I must, for sure, put out what the great international relations expert envisioned as key duties as a diplomat. To Hans Joachim Morgenthau, a diplomat has three cardinal types of representation. These are:

1. Symbolic Representation

By definition, ambassadors are the representative of their homeland. He is the agent of his home government. He extends and receives congratulations and condolences upon events.

2. Legal Representation

He is also a legal representative of the sending state. His acts possess legal value. As a legal representative, he has to act according to the statutes, rules, terms, conditions and law. He is further supposed to act according to the dictates and directions of the country, he has to act that he is the country in which he is stationed. It is the most sincere job of a diplomat. He should observe the legal framework of the host state. He should not suppose the boundaries of host state.

3. Political Representative

He is the political representative of his nation. He also contributes in shaping the foreign policy of his state. He has to aid, advice and assist the foreign minister, PM, Head of the state, foreign officials etc. in formulating the foreign policy. Two functions, formulation and Execution of Foreign Policy.

As interesting this subject might be to you, for me, reading international certified journals on this subject matter is something far beyond my leisure. Don’t forget to bear in mind that the situational arrangements of Embassies/High Commissions depend on what they want to achieve; at what particular timeframe and on what speed.The US State Department divides the work into five career tracks:

1. Consular - dealing with visas, passports, deaths, births, arrests, etc.

2. Economic - dealing with trade, labor, industry, energy, environment, science

3. Political - dealing with political events, parties, negotiations

4. Management - dealing with the functioning of embassies, personnel, security, IT, communications, Customs, housing, etc.

4. Public Diplomacy - Public relations, cultural and educational exchanges.

With utmost display of diplomacy by world leaders, we would have been able to avert the killing of Major General Qasem Soleimani, the annexation of Kuwait by Saddam Hussein, scaling back of visa services between US and Turkey in 2017, the Cold War, 1st and 2nd World Wars respectively. Let diplomacy lead the world and the world would be a peaceful place to live in

Columnist: Abdul Razak Lukman, Contributor