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    Ghana’s president appoints new interior minister

    The move is to reinforce domestic security after Friday's militant attacks in Burkina Faso and ahead of elections this year

    Di TPI
    Pubblicato il 19 Gen. 2016 alle 12:03 Aggiornato il 10 Set. 2019 alle 22:56

    ACCRA, Jan 19 (Reuters) – Ghana’s President John Mahama on Tuesday appointed a former United Nations official as interior minister to reinforce domestic security after Friday’s militant attacks in Burkina Faso and ahead of elections this year.

    Prosper Douglas Bani, Mahama’s former chief of staff who once coordinated the U.N.’s Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery in Africa, is expected to focus on security in the wake of the Islamist militant attacks that killed 29 people, two government sources told Reuters.

    Gunmen stormed a restaurant and hotel in the capital Ouagadougou on Friday night, singling out white people for slaughter. Eight Burkinabes, six Canadians, three Ukrainians and two French people were killed, among others. Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb claimed responsibility for the assault.

    It followed a similar incident in Mali’s capital Bamako where gunmen took hostages in November.

    Ghana’s security chiefs have agreed to immediately tighten security at the borders and key public facilities such as shopping malls, the sources said.

    Bani, 57, requires parliamentary approval to become minister. Mark Woyongo, the former interior minister, has been reassigned, the presidency said.

    The interior ministry was not the only change made to the government. Mohammed Muniru Limunaa, formerly the Northern regional minister, has been named the food and agriculture minister.

    Limunaa replaces Fiifi Kwetey, who has been tapped to head the transport ministry, a month after its last minister resigned over bus branding costs.

    Ghana, one of Africa’s most stable democracies, will hold presidential and parliamentary elections in November in a vote that is expected to be a tight race between Mahama and main opposition candidate Nana Akufo Addo.

    Mahama has faced vocal public criticism because of power shortages and economic troubles with labour unions set to embark on street demonstrations on Wednesday to protest high utility tariffs and other government taxes.

    The International Monetary Fund granted Ghana a three-year aid deal to help its economy dogged by a high budget deficit, widening public debt and high inflation. 

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