Ghana has agreed to accept West African nationals deported from the US and 14 have already arrived in the country
Ghana has agreed to accept West African nationals deported from the United States, with the first group of 14 already repatriated, President John Dramani Mahama confirmed late Wednesday.
The deportees, comprising mostly Nigerians and one Gambian, were processed through Ghana before being facilitated back to their home countries, Mahama told reporters at a press briefing.
The arrangement follows a request from Washington as part of President Donald Trump’s hardline immigration agenda, which aims to remove millions of people living in the US illegally. The Trump administration has increasingly sought third-country agreements with African nations to speed up deportations.
Mahama defended the deal, saying West African citizens did not need visas to enter Ghana under existing regional protocols. “We were approached by the US to accept third-party nationals who were being removed from the US, and we agreed that West African nationals were acceptable because all our fellow West Africans don’t need a visa to come to our country,” he said.
The Ghanaian leader did not disclose whether there was a limit to the number of deportees the country might take in.
The US has made similar arrangements elsewhere on the continent. In recent months, it deported five individuals to Eswatini, eight to South Sudan, and seven to Rwanda under separate agreements. Rwanda in particular has agreed to accept up to 250 migrants deported from the United States.
In July, Trump hosted five West African presidents at the White House, where sources said the issue of resettling deportees featured prominently. Mahama, however, was not among the leaders present at that meeting.
The development highlights growing US pressure on African governments to cooperate with its deportation drive—an approach that has raised concerns among migrant rights groups about the safety and welfare of those being removed.