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Viewing cable 06ACCRA217, SCENESETTER FOR ADMIRAL ULRICHT,S VISIT TO GHANA,

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06ACCRA217 2006-01-26 14:33 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Accra
VZCZCXRO2967
RR RUEHPA
DE RUEHAR #0217/01 0261433
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 261433Z JAN 06
FM AMEMBASSY ACCRA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0297
INFO RUEHZK/ECOWAS COLLECTIVE
RHMFISS/HQ USEUCOM VAIHINGEN GE
RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC
RUEKDIA/DIA WASHDC
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC 0535
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 05 ACCRA 000217 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SENSITIVE 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: EAIR ECON EFIN ELAB GH MAS PGOV PREL
SUBJECT: SCENESETTER FOR ADMIRAL ULRICHT,S VISIT TO GHANA, 
FEBRUARY 1-2,2006 
 
REF: A. ACCRA 892 B. ACCRA 658 
 
-------------------- 
Summary/Introduction 
-------------------- 
 
1. (SBU) Introduction/Summary:  Ghana is a democratic, 
market-oriented, pro-American country in a region marked by 
conflict and authoritarian rule.  It has one of the best 
human rights records in Africa and has made significant 
efforts to combat trafficking in persons.  President John 
Kufuor just completed the first year of his second term, 
which has so far been marked by intra-party tensions, 
sluggish decision-making, and corruption scandals, although 
his government has picked up some momentum in the past six 
months.  Ghana exerts regional leadership, strongly supports 
the Global War on Terrorism, and is a committed, major 
contributor to UN peace keeping operations.  Ghana is a 
member of the IAEA and has a seat on the UN Security Council. 
 Bilateral relations are excellent and broad-ranging. 
President Kufuor has met President Bush six times, met with 
former President for the second time in October and earlier 
this month hosted the successful visit to Ghana of First Lady 
Laura Bush.  Ghana is eligible for U.S. assistance under the 
Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) and hopes to sign an MCA 
Compact by mid-2006.  End Summary. 
 
-------------------- 
U.S.-Ghana Relations 
-------------------- 
 
2. (SBU) Ghana is a reliable, democratic partner for the U.S. 
in peacekeeping, conflict resolution, counter-terrorism, and 
economic development.  U.S. interests center on support for 
Ghana's fourteen-year-old democracy, promotion of open 
markets, and the reduction of poverty.  Key components of the 
broad U.S.-Ghana relationship are: 
 
3. (SBU) Democracy:  Ghana's December 2004 parliamentary and 
presidential election, the fourth election under the 1992 
constitution, was seen as free, fair and generally peaceful. 
Ghana has a free, lively media and civil society, a largely 
independent judiciary and Electoral Commission, and an 
apolitical military.  It generally respects human rights and 
rule of law.  However, the long-term success of Ghana's 
constitutional democracy is not guaranteed and democratic 
institutions are weak.  While Ghana scores better than many 
countries in Africa on Transparency International's 
Corruption Perception Index (Ghana ranks 65 globally on the 
CPI), corruption is a serious and growing concern. 
Anti-corruption institutions are weak.  We supported the 2004 
election with Mission observers and $1.3 million in election 
assistance.  We have programs to strengthen parliament, the 
judiciary, the police and the media. 
 
4. (SBU) Development Assistance and Trade:  Annual USG 
assistance to Ghana is approximately $75 million.  This 
includes one of USAID's largest programs in Sub-Saharan 
Africa.  Ghana receives approximately $55 million in USAID 
grant assistance and food aid per year, with a focus on 
education, health, HIV/AIDS, trade and investment, and 
democracy and governance.  The U.S. and Ghana have a 
relatively dynamic trade relationship.  U.S. exports to Ghana 
in 2004 increased to approximately $300 million, a 50% 
increase over 2003, and Ghana is consistently the fifth or 
sixth largest market in Africa for U.S. goods.  USTR 
considers Ghana a "pacesetter" country, due to its relative 
success in diversifying its exports under AGOA. 
 
5. (SBU) Security:  Ghana provides us excellent cooperation 
in counter-terrorism and counter-narcotics efforts.  We have 
a robust mil-mil relationship, in part a recognition of 
Ghana's outstanding contribution to peacekeeping (Ghana is 
the fourth largest contributor to UN peacekeeping forces 
worldwide) and to regional stability.  Ghana was key to peace 
efforts in Liberia and Cote d'Ivoire.  During last year,s 
Togo crisis, Ghana played a constructive, low-key role, in 
support of the Economic Community of West African States 
(ECOWAS).  Kufuor served as Chair of the ECOWAS for two 
terms, ending January 2005.  ECOWAS Executive Secretary 
Mohammed Ibn Chambas is Ghanaian.  Ghana has also been 
welcoming to refugees and currently hosts about 60,000 
refugees, mostly Liberian.  We support Ghana's regional role 
through our mil-mil activities, USAID's West Africa Regional 
Program (WARP) and our Refugee Coordinator Office, both based 
 
ACCRA 00000217  002 OF 005 
 
 
in Accra. 
 
---------------------------- 
Internal Political Situation 
---------------------------- 
 
6. (SBU) President Kufuor is now just over one year into his 
second term.  This term has been marked by major continuity, 
in his ministerial appointments, his priority themes, and his 
slow, sometimes plodding approach to governance.   In the 
first half of this term, the GOG was distracted by corruption 
allegations and turmoil in Togo and was slow to get 
organized. 
 
7. (SBU) In the second part of last year, the GOG appears to 
regain some momentum.  In response to rising global oil 
prices and IMF pressure, Kufuor raised petrol prices and 
established a National Petroleum Authority.  The GOG recently 
made strides toward signing a Millennium Challenge Account 
(MCA) agreement, submitted a trafficking in persons law to 
parliament, and eliminated all school fees, thus guaranteeing 
free primary education for the first time.   Kufuor offered 
Ghana as one of the first two countries to be reviewed in the 
NEPAD African Peer Review Mechanism. 
 
8. (SBU) The backdrop of Ghanaian politics, however, remains 
highly polarized.  The New Patriotic Party (NPP) and National 
Democratic Congress Party (NDC) are closely matched in 
parliament, the result of a very close 2004 national election 
result.   Leaders of these two major parties intensely 
dislike each other.  NDC parliamentarians complain that the 
NPP throws its weight around in parliament, using its 
majority to force through laws.  The NDC retained 
parliamentary seats in hotly contested by-elections in 
Asawase (Ashanti Region) in April and Odododiodio (Accra) in 
August, which rankled the NPP and reenergized the NDC, but 
did not change the overall political equation.  Tensions 
between the NDC and NPP could worsen as both parties prepare 
for District Assembly elections in 2006 and 
presidential/parliamentary elections in 2008. 
 
9. (SBU) The NPP and NDC both suffer from intra-party 
divisions.  The President,s choice did not prevail in the 
NPP,s closely fought recent election of new party 
leadership.  There are already a number of competitors 
informally within the NPP in the running to succeed Kufuor, 
including the Minister of Defense, several other ministers, 
and the Vice President.  The result is grandstanding and 
friction at the top levels of the bureaucracy. 
 
10. (SBU) The NDC, which held its national convention in 
December, is financially weak and badly divided.  The 
convention reinforced the strong influence in the party of 
former President J.J. Rawlings.  However, there are many in 
the party (including the camp of former NDC presidential 
candidate John Atta Mills) who want to distance themselves 
from the ex-president.  There are six other smaller parties 
in Ghana which also face significant internal divisions as 
they prepare for the 2008 election. 
 
11. (SBU) The Kufuor government has faced new charges of 
corruption, highlighted by Ghana's free media.  Energy 
Commission Members were forced out under a cloud.  The 
Administration was attacked for alleged corruption in the 
creation of Ghana International Airlines.  Media allegations 
have linked the President to a corrupt hotel deal, as 
revealed by an Iraqi-American named Gizelle Yadji, who claims 
she had an extra-marital affair with the President.  (Kufuor 
denies involvement in the hotel, bought by his son, but the 
GOG has not commented on the other allegation).  Two recently 
published public opinion polls found that there is a growing 
perception that corruption is on the rise, especially by the 
president and his office.  In November, the Enquirer 
newspaper revealed a secretly-recorded tape in which the NPP 
Party Chairman alleged that government contractors pay 
kickbacks to the president and his staff.  The scandal 
resulted in the resignation of the party chairman. 
 
-------- 
Security 
-------- 
 
12. (SBU) Ghana's 8,000 strong military is characterized by 
its allegiance (at least over the past six years) to elected 
civilian leadership, as well as a rich peacekeeping tradition 
 
ACCRA 00000217  003 OF 005 
 
 
and a close relationship to the United States.  Since 1960, 
over 80,000 Ghanaian soldiers and police have participated in 
peacekeeping missions worldwide, including currently in the 
Democratic Republic of Congo, Lebanon, Liberia, Sierra Leone 
and Cote d'Ivoire.  We provide, or have provided, support 
through our Excess Defense Articles (EDA) program; the 
International Military Exchange Training (IMET) program; the 
Foreign Military Sales (FMS) and Foreign Military Funding 
(FMF) programs; the Enhanced International Peacekeeping 
Capabilities (EIPC) program; the African Contingency 
Operations Training and Assistance (ACOTA) program; and a 
robust DoD Humanitarian Assistance (HA) program.  Ghana will 
likely receive even more support under the Global Peace 
Operations Initiative (GPOI).  Ghana opened the Kofi Annan 
International Peacekeeping Training Center (KAIPTC) in 2004, 
the only center of its kind in West Africa.  The United 
States European Command (EUCOM) provides direct support in 
the form of a liaison officer who is attached for duty at the 
KAIPTC, and has provided approximately $1 million in funding 
support. 
 
13. (SBU) Our mil-mil relationship also includes West Africa 
Training Cruises and Joint Combined Exchange Training.  Ghana 
is the newest member of the State Partnership Program (SPP), 
partnered with the North Dakota National Guard (only the 
second in Sub-Saharan Africa), which will further strengthen 
mil-mil and civilian-military ties.  Ghana participates as an 
African Fuel Initiative Hub country, and allowed the 
construction of an Exercise Reception Facility (ERF) at Accra 
Air Base under an addendum of that Technical Arrangement (TA) 
signed in 2005.  Ghanaians avidly participate in DOD's 
Counterterrorism Fellowship program (CTFP).  Military visits 
over the past year included three ship visits, ten General 
Officer or Flag Officer visits, and a regional maritime and 
coastal security conference. 
 
14. (SBU) Ghana is a strong ally in the Global War on 
Terrorism.  Ghana has signed 12 of 13 UN terrorism 
conventions and a Customs Mutual Assistance Agreement and has 
been supportive in urging the IAEA to take the Iran nuclear 
issue to the UN Security Council.  We have excellent police 
contacts and good cooperation with the police and other 
security services on matters related to terrorism.  There is 
a growing concern about narcotics and illegal arms 
trafficking through Ghana, as well as rising crime and fraud 
problems.  We have assisted Ghana's police, customs, and 
counter-narcotics agencies, including ongoing basic training 
for the police. 
 
-------------------- 
State of the Economy 
-------------------- 
 
15. (SBU) In 2000, the Kufuor government inherited a 
distressed economy: high debt levels, accelerating inflation 
and interest rates, a plummeting currency (the "cedi"), all 
exacerbated by declining world cocoa and gold prices (the 
main foreign exchange earners), and rising crude oil prices. 
Kufuor's government strengthened fiscal and monetary policies 
considerably, reining in spending and borrowing, and cutting 
subsidies by imposing badly needed energy and water price 
increases. 
 
16. (SBU) The improved policy performance along with higher 
cocoa and gold prices since 2002 resulted in higher economic 
growth, reaching 5.2% in 2003, 5.8% in 2004, and projected at 
over 5% for 2005.  Tight monetary policies since mid-2003 
restored confidence in the economy, and the IMF calls the 
government's control of expenditures during the 2004 election 
year an "historic achievement."  As a result of the improved 
policies, inflation fell from over 30% in mid-2003 to below 
12% for 2004.  Although the annual inflation rate rose to 
14.8% in 2005 due to high world oil prices, Ghana's Central 
Bank expects it to fall to single digits for 2006.  Key 
short-term interest rates have also fallen to below 15%.  The 
cedi has been relatively stable against the dollar for over 
two years. 
 
--------------------------------------------- --- 
Positive Economic Trends:  MCA and Regional Role 
--------------------------------------------- --- 
 
17. (SBU) Ghana is becoming a gateway to West Africa, due in 
part to its political stability and economic reforms, but 
also due to turmoil in the region.  Trade and investment 
 
ACCRA 00000217  004 OF 005 
 
 
flows to and through Ghana are increasing, and businesses, 
Embassies, NGOs, and international organizations are 
increasing their presence in Ghana, using it as a regional 
hub. 
 
18. (SBU) In May 2004, the Millennium Challenge Corporation 
(MCC) designated Ghana eligible for Millennium Challenge 
Account (MCA) funding.  The Ghanaians were slow to organize 
their MCA team and the process languished for months, 
sidelined by the 2004 election campaign and subsequent 
reorganization of the cabinet in early 2005.  President 
Kufuor has pressed the MCC to expedite completion of the 
Compact negotiations, but the Ghana MCA team, reorganized in 
June 2005, understands the priority is to complete a quality 
Compact within a realistic timeline.  Ghana now has adequate 
resources to do the job, with its own $500,000 budget and the 
agreement signed August 11 with the MCC for $3 million of 
609g funding.  The Ghanaians also now have the right 
personnel in place, and the $517 million draft proposal, 
focused on agri-business, promises to deliver on both poverty 
reduction and economic growth.  Both the MCC and Ghana MCA 
team hope to complete a signed and approved Compact by 
mid-2006. 
 
19. (SBU) In July 2004, Ghana reached Completion Point under 
the Heavily Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) Initiative, 
resulting in $4.2 billion debt relief.  This achievement also 
ensured Ghana's eligibility for further debt relief under the 
G8's Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI), unveiled in 
June 2005.  Ghana is also realizing large foreign remittance 
flows, estimated at approximately $4 billion in 2005, as well 
as increasing foreign investment, including from U.S. 
companies such as Newmont Mining and ALCOA.  The government 
has resolved many of the investment disputes that undermined 
U.S.-Ghana relations in recent years. 
 
20. (SBU) Ghana's impressive performance has not gone 
unnoticed.  Standard and Poor's assigned Ghana a relatively 
high "B plus" sovereign credit rating.  Fitch Rating Agency 
upgraded Ghana to a "B plus" rating in March 2005, citing 
HIPC Completion Point, improved economic indicators, and 
fiscal restraint through the election cycle. 
 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Concerns: Energy, Business Climate, External Shocks 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
 
21. (SBU) The government faces major challenges in its effort 
to reform the economy.  Ghana has a reputation as a slow and 
steady reformer, and GoG leaders do not appear to be taking 
full advantage of the current opportunities.  While the 
Finance Ministry and Central Bank have done an admirable job 
of implementing macroeconomic reforms, the GoG has been slow 
to implement the politically sensitive next level of reforms, 
including privatization of utilities, lowering trade 
barriers, improving the investment climate, and attacking 
corruption (especially in the ports).  Economic reform lost 
considerable momentum during the 2004 election year.  Many 
NPP leaders were concerned that the reform effort had not 
translated into improved living standards for Ghanaian 
citizens, so pressure increased on President Kufuor to 
increase spending and delay politically difficult reforms. 
 
22. (SBU) High energy costs could undermine the recent real 
gains in economic growth, and Ghana has had difficulty 
fulfilling its commitment to the IMF to deregulate the 
petroleum market.  Also, despite Kufuor's promise of a 
"Golden Age of Business," Ghana remains a difficult and risky 
place to do business.  Contract sanctity and difficulty in 
obtaining clear land title are concerns.  Ghana's congested 
courts make it difficult to resolve disputes.  Due to 
excessive bureaucracy the average time to start a business 
exceeds 80 days, high compared to Ghana's peers (i.e., other 
top performers).  This contributes to widespread corruption, 
as the heavy paperwork and licensing requirements create 
incentives to bypass normal channels.  While the corruption 
damages Ghana's reputation, it also scares away legitimate 
investors and diminishes the potential impact of new 
investment on economic growth and reducing poverty.  Finally, 
Ghana's infrastructure is in poor shape, and its dependence 
on commodity exports (gold, cocoa, timber) leaves it highly 
vulnerable to external shocks. 
 
---------------- 
Economic Outlook 
 
ACCRA 00000217  005 OF 005 
 
 
---------------- 
 
23. (SBU) Despite these concerns, the overall outlook is 
positive.  If Ghana maintains fiscal and monetary discipline, 
world oil prices stabilize, and favorable external conditions 
continue for gold and cocoa, the economy should remain stable 
and continue to grow at the rate of 5 to 6% per year. 
BRIDGEWATER