Three feuding ethnic groups in Ghana's Oti Region just signed a peace pact after years of land and chieftaincy disputes tore their communities apart.
Nkwanta South peace dialogue kicks off
Nkwanta South peace dialogue kicks off
- The National Peace Council convened leaders from Adele, Akyode, and Challa communities.
- Chiefs, queenmothers, elders, and youth all got seats at the table.
- Land and chieftaincy beefs drove the long-running conflict.
- Hostilities flared up again back in November 2021.
- Fianu, chairing the National Peace Council, praised the willingness to talk.
- Signing a peace pact showed genuine readiness, per his remarks.
- Trust, forgiveness, and compromise were framed as non-negotiables.
- The media got a direct appeal to amplify peace rather than stoke tensions.
- Nana Amoah Boafo represented the Adele Traditional Council.
- Nana Obombo Lipuwura Serwura spoke for the Akyode Traditional Council.
- Nana Addo Chederi Kanewu reaffirmed Challa's commitment to dignity and rights.
- Collaborative, law-based dispute resolution anchored everyone's pledge.
- Firearms smuggling into Nkwanta Municipality must stop immediately.
- The festival ban imposed since November 2023 by regional security councils stays enforced.
- All parties stick to their land boundaries pending court outcomes.
- Rumor-spreading and social media misinformation got called out explicitly.
- A joint implementation and monitoring committee will track compliance.
- Youth leaders specifically got told to shut down armed attacks regardless of provocation.
- Security agencies must wrap up all pending violence investigations.
- Professionalism and impartiality from security forces were demanded across the board.