A Wreath-Laying ceremony was yesterday held in Accra to honour people who performed key roles within the abolition of the slave commerce in British colonies.
The ceremony,which kinds a part of the actions to commemorate this 12 months’s Emancipation Day celebrations, passed off on the W. E. B Dubois Centre, the George Padmore Library, and the Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Park all in Accra.
The occasion was characterised by lightening of aperpetual flame by the Minister of Tourism, Art and Culture, Mr Andrew Egyapa Mercer.
This was adopted witha tribute to the ancestors of the Emancipation Day by youngsters in tourism, tape-cutting of an artwork gallery of the legacy of Dr Efua Sutherland, and conventional dance performances by the Ghana Dance Company.
Celebrated yearly, the Emancipation Day is to mark the abolition of slavery within the British Colonies in 1834, and its annual observance launched in Ghana in 1998.
This 12 months’s celebration,which began on Monday and would finish on August 1, is beneath the theme, ‘Unity and Resilience; Building Stronger Communities for a Brighter Future.’
Mr Mercer laid a wreath on behalf of the federal government and the citizenry, the Paramount Chief of Akwamu Traditional Area, Odeneho KwafoAkoto III, on behalf of the normal rulers, Ms Blandina Sika Gumenu, on behalf of the Youth of Africa, and the Executive Secretary of the PANAFEST Foundation, Mr Rabbi Kohain.
Delivering the keynote tackle, Mr Mercer mentioned the launch of initiatives corresponding to “Beyond the Return”and “The Year of Return” initiatives by the federal government underscored its dedication to fostering collaboration between the worldwide African household.
Having been in a position to rejoice the Emancipation Day throughout the assorted areas of the nation, Mr Mercer urged the citizenry and people from the diaspora to reaffirm their dedication to constructing a brighter future by way of resilience and unity.
Odeneho Kwafo Akoto IIIsaid, “despite the legacy of those dark days, our resilience has proved our greatest assetin the journey towards building a global African community we all want to see.”
He urged the citizenry and people within the diaspora to make use of the Emancipation Day as a instrument to rekindle misplaced heritage of the African continent.
The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of GTA, Mr Akwasi Agyeman, underscored the necessity for Africans, together with Ghanaians, to emancipate themselves from psychological slavery, contemplating therise of youth migration on the African continent.
There have been additionally solidarity messages by the Director, Diaspora Affairs, Office of the President, Mr Akwasi Awua Ababio, Chairperson of the International Board of Trustees, PANAFEST Foundation, Professor Esi Sutherland-Addy, and the High Commissioner of Barbados to Ghana, Mrs Juliette Babb-Riley.
BY PRECIOUS NYARKO BOAKYE