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Ayorkor Botchwey participates in Pacific Islands Forum as special guest

The 18-member forum in Rarotonga, capital of the Cook Islands, includes Australia, New Zealand and small island nations-Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Samoa and Tonga

Ghana’s foreign minister Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, is participating in a leaders’ meeting of the Pacific Islands Forum in Cook Island as a special guest.

The 18-member forum in Rarotonga, capital of the Cook Islands, includes Australia, New Zealand and small island nations-Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Samoa and Tonga.

Earlier in the week, she signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on behalf of Ghana to establish formal diplomatic relations, with the Cook Islands. The Prime Minister of Cook Islands, Mark Brown, signed for his country.

Ghana is the second African country after South Africa to establish formal diplomatic relations with the South Pacific nation which comprises 15 islands.  Brown is also the chairman of the Pacific Islands Forum.

Ghana has a limited diplomatic footprint in the pacific, but diplomats say relations with developing countries, however small or distant, are important for building and maintaining alliances for advocacy within multilateral institutions.

Botchwey held several high-level meetings with Pacific regional leaders, and discussed a range of issues, including climate change which constitutes a grave threat to small island nations and Africa, despite the fact that developed countries were the worst polluters.

She also held talks with the Australian Minister for International Development, Pat Conroy with whom she exchanged ideas as to how to make the Commonwealth more impactful to member countries.

In another meeting with the Prime Minister of Fiji, Sitiveni Rabuka, she spoke of the need to make the commonwealth relevant at “people to people level,” as well as among governments.

The Fijian leader recalled his years as a UN peacekeeper in southern Lebanon when serving under the command of the late General Emmanuel Erskine.

Ghana and Fiji are major contributors to UN peacekeeping work.

“We share a common history (as former British colonies), but we must work to build a common future, Mr. Rabuka said.

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