logo
With PM visiting Ghana, Cong recalls Nkrumah-Nehru ties

With PM visiting Ghana, Cong recalls Nkrumah-Nehru ties

The Print02-07-2025
Modi embarked on a five-nation visit to Ghana, Trinidad & Tobago, Argentina, Brazil, and Namibia from July 2 to 9, this morning.
New Delhi, Jul 2 (PTI) With Prime Minister Narendra Modi embarking on a visit to Ghana, the Congress on Wednesday recalled the very warm relationship between former Ghanaian president Kwame Nkrumah and India's first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru.
In a post on X, Congress general secretary in-charge communications Jairam Ramesh said, 'Super Premium Frequent Flier PM is in Ghana today. Till the mid-60s, Ghanian and indeed African politics was dominated by Kwame Nkrumah, who is an iconic figure. He shared a very warm relationship with Jawaharlal Nehru, which long pre-dated Ghana's independence in March 1957.' A prominent road in Accra on which India House is located is named after Nehru, while the diplomatic enclave in New Delhi has a Kwame Nkrumah Marg, Ramesh pointed out.
'Nkrumah visited India from December 22, 1958 to January 8, 1959. He was in New Delhi, Mumbai, Nangal, Chandigarh, Jhansi, Agra, Bengaluru, Mysuru, and Pune. He spent five days in Bengaluru and Mysuru alone,' the Congress leader recalled.
Nkumah paid special visits to the Trombay Atomic Energy Establishment, the National Physical Laboratory, the Indian Agricultural Research Institute, the Bhakra Nangal Dam, and the National Defence Academy, Ramesh said.
One offshoot of this extended visit was Indian assistance for the establishment of the Ghanaian Air Force, Ramesh said.
A few years earlier, Nehru had inaugurated the Department of African Studies at Delhi University before the decolonisation of the continent had begun, Ramesh recalled.
'Speaking on the occasion on Aug 5, 1955 he (Nehru) had said: it is so obviously necessary and desirable for people in India to study Africa, and not merely, as the Vice Chancellor said, because it is there…But you ignore the study of Africa at your peril.
'It is of the most urgent importance for us to understand Africa…and her problems and her people more particularly… When I think of Aftica, many ideas come to me…I have a tremendous feeling of atonement of humanity…the way Africa and the people of Africa have been treated for hundreds of years, a kind of feeling that the rest of humanity would perform 'prayashchit' for it,' Ramesh quoted Nehru as saying.
Ramesh also shared archival footage from Nkrumah's visit to India and he being received by Nehru at the airport.
Nkrumah was also the first prime minister of Ghana and then served as the president. He was the PM of Ghana when he visited India In his departure statement, Modi said that at the invitation of Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama, he will be there on July 2 and 3.
'Ghana is a valued partner in the Global South and plays an important role in the African Union and the Economic Community of West African States. I look forward to my exchanges aimed at further deepening our historical ties and opening up new windows of cooperation, including in the areas of investment, energy, health, security, capacity building and development partnership,' Modi said.
As fellow democracies, it will be an honour to speak at the Parliament of Ghana, he added. PTI ASK DV DV
This report is auto-generated from PTI news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rahul Gandhi has tea with ‘dead' voters from Bihar, thanks EC for ‘unique experience'
Rahul Gandhi has tea with ‘dead' voters from Bihar, thanks EC for ‘unique experience'

Hindustan Times

time10 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Rahul Gandhi has tea with ‘dead' voters from Bihar, thanks EC for ‘unique experience'

Amid the ongoing high-voltage row over the special intensive revision (SIR) of the electoral rolls in Bihar, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Wednesday thanked the Election Commission for the 'unique experience' he had of having tea with some "dead" voters. Rahul Gandhi also told the 'dead' voters to go around Delhi for some sightseeing as they won't even be charged tickets. (X/@INCIndia) The Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha met a group of seven voters at his residence, who told him how they were declared "dead" by the poll body and their names were removed from the electoral rolls. "There have been many interesting experiences in life, but I never got the chance to have tea with 'dead people'. For this unique experience, thank you Election Commission!" Gandhi said in a post on X. ALSO READ | EC: Not legally bound to disclose omitted names in Bihar SIR He also shared a video of his meeting with those voters. Some of the voters are heard telling the Congress leader that they found they were "declared dead" upon checking the electoral rolls released by the EC during the SIR. These people were among the 65 lakh voters whose names have been removed from the rolls in poll-bound Bihar. WATCH: The group informed Gandhi that they appeared before the Supreme Court on Wednesday to get their names back on the list as the apex court is hearing petitions against the SIR exercise in Bihar. Gandhi is also heard asking them if they had ever been to Delhi earlier, and tells them to go for some sightseeing in the capital as the "dead" will not even need any tickets. Later, the Congress also said that the seven voters from Bihar are very much alive, and they shared tea with Rahul Gandhi. These voters from Bihar are Ramikbal Ray, Harendra Ray, Lalmuni Devi, Vachiya Devi, Lalwati Devi, Punam Kumari, and Munna Kumar; and all of them hail from RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav's Raghopur constituency. ALSO READ | ECI targeting Rahul to cover up its mistakes: Congress "They have been removed from the electoral rolls despite having completed the requisite paperwork for the SIR. The Election Commission has not openly published lists of the people whom it has declared dead, migrated, etc. Our teams on the ground were able to identify these people only because they managed to informally get EC's internal report in two to three polling booths," the party said. It added that these seven voters represent only a fraction of the "unjustly" deleted voters in two to three polling booths in the constituency. "This is not a clerical error - it is political disenfranchisement in plain sight," it added. "After 'Vote Chori' was exposed in Bengaluru, it is clear that the Bihar SIR exercise is also compromised. When the living are struck off as dead, the death certificate is issued to democracy itself," the Congress further said.

Toxic Spill at China-Owned Zambian Mine 30 Times Worse Than Estimated
Toxic Spill at China-Owned Zambian Mine 30 Times Worse Than Estimated

Mint

time11 minutes ago

  • Mint

Toxic Spill at China-Owned Zambian Mine 30 Times Worse Than Estimated

The partial collapse of a waste dam at a Chinese state-owned copper mine in Zambia may have released 30 times more toxic sludge into the environment than previously reported, according to an independent evaluation of the disaster. At least 1.5 million tons of the poisonous substance escaped when a reservoir failed at the Sino-Metals Leach Zambia Ltd. mine near the northern city of Kitwe, findings from the company hired to assess the environmental damage showed. That would fill more than 400 Olympic-sized pools and rank the incident among the mining industry's worst catastrophes globally. The government and the company have previously said 50,000 tons spilled in the February disaster. Video evidence from social media and field data show this to be 'grossly inaccurate,' Drizit Zambia Ltd. — hired by Sino-Metals to conduct an environmental audit of the accident — said in a June 3 letter seen by Bloomberg and verified by the company. Drizit described the event as a 'large-scale environmental catastrophe' that threatened drinking water, fishing stocks and farmland in the area. Sino-Metals, which has terminated its contract with Drizit, questioned the methodology used by the company to assess the magnitude of the spill. The disaster risks undermining Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema's plan to more than triple copper output to 3 million tons in the coming years. China Nonferrous Mining Corp., SML's parent, in 2023 pledged to invest $1.3 billion to expand output in the southern African nation, the continent's second-biggest producer of the metal. The incident also complicates Lusaka's ties with Beijing, at a time when Hichilema's administration is working to conclude restructuring deals with Chinese lenders for about $5.6 billion of debt. The US Embassy flagged concern about the scale of the disaster last week, when it ordered the immediate withdrawal of its officials from Kitwe and some surrounding areas, citing newly available information that revealed the extent of the contamination. In an Aug. 6 email to staff seen by Bloomberg and verified by the US government, US Ambassador to Zambia Michael Gonzales said the disaster appeared to be the sixth-worst in history, and that toxic substances including arsenic, cyanide, uranium will continue to pose threats to humans and animals until removed. The US Embassy declined to comment. 'Without immediate intervention, the consequences for future generations of Zambians will be severe and long-lasting,' Drizit said in the letter. The company declined to comment beyond verifying the letter, citing legal reasons. Drizit's parent company in South Africa has been in the environmental risk-mitigation industry since 1975. Sino-Metals said it terminated its contract with Drizit because of unspecified contractual breaches, and that Drizit had time to remedy these but failed. 'The dam where the tailings escaped from is still there and the amount of tailings that escaped can be ascertained by the volume of the dam,' a spokesman for the company said. 'However, if Drizit were able to calculate the amount of spillage by using social media footage, that is quite interesting methodology.' Mike Mposha, Zambia's green economy and environment minister, declined to immediately comment. Zambia's government last week played down concerns about the incident, saying there was no cause for panic and that water quality in the affected areas has been restored. Senior officials appeared on state media at the weekend drinking tap water from Kitwe to prove it was safe. No deaths or confirmed cases of heavy metal poisoning have been reported, the government said. The disaster unfolded when a dam wall breached after heavy rains on Feb. 18, releasing a torrent of sulphuric acid-bearing material used to extract copper into the nearby Mwambashi River. Preliminary assessments showed the river measured a pH as low as 1, Collins Nzovu, Zambia's water and sanitation minister, told lawmakers Feb. 21. Fluid with that level of acidity is strong enough to dissolve human bones. Water from the Mwambashi flows into the Kafue River, which passes through one of Africa's biggest national parks. Zambia's capital, Lusaka, relies on the river for much of its water supply. In the immediate aftermath of the incident, the government began dumping hundreds of tons of lime into the rivers to neutralize the acid, which had wiped out aquatic life for miles, along with crops growing alongside them. While the acidity may have returned to normal, heavy metals pose a persistent threat, especially to the 800 individuals still living near the fallout zone, Drizit's letter said. The South Africa-based company said its engagements with SML had been difficult. 'From the outset, they have actively sought to disrupt the assessment process and have made attempts to influence the outcomes of our findings,' it said. 'SML has accused us of breaching the contract and has since terminated the agreement just days before its conclusion, seemingly with the intention of preventing our report from reaching the proper authorities.' With assistance from Taonga Mitimingi. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

Trump Wins Fight to Withhold Billions of Dollars in Foreign Aid
Trump Wins Fight to Withhold Billions of Dollars in Foreign Aid

Business Standard

time11 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Trump Wins Fight to Withhold Billions of Dollars in Foreign Aid

The Trump administration can cut potentially billions of dollars in foreign assistance funds approved by Congress for this year, a US appeals court ruled. In a 2-1 decision on Wednesday, the appellate panel reversed a Washington federal judge who found that US officials were violating the Constitution's separation of powers principles by failing to authorize the money to be paid in line with what the legislative branch directed. The ruling is a significant win for Trump's broader effort to withhold funding from programs that have fallen out of favor with his administration, regardless of how Congress exercised its authority over spending. Trump's critics have assailed what they've described as a far-reaching power grab by the executive branch. The nonprofits and business that sued could ask all of the active judges on the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit to reconsider the three-member panel's decision.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store