The President of Cyprus, Nikos Christodoulides, says he shares in the vision of Ghana’s Foreign Minister and candidate for the Commonwealth Secretary-General position, Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey.
President Christodoulides made the remarks when he hosted a meeting with Ms Botchwey, one of Africa’s top diplomats, at his office in Nicosia, the capital of Cyprus, last Wednesday to discuss bilateral and multilateral issues.
A New Commonwealth
Ms Botchwey’s vision for what she has called, “A New Commonwealth”, is founded on six pillars, including stimulating trade and investment among the organisation’s 56 member countries who have a total annual GDP of over $13 trillion.
Other pillars of Ms Botchwey’s agenda include skills training, innovation and financial support for start-ups to open up job opportunities at home for the youth to stem the tide of illegal migration.
At a SIDS Forum in Antigua in May, she called on international financial institutions and industrialised countries to re-engineer the global financial architecture to protect countries facing a clear existential threat from climate disasters and other external political crises.
The Commonwealth includes 33 small states, of which 25 are SIDS. The Commonwealth is considered a voice for most vulnerable states.
Unlike the UN where five permanent members have the power of veto on the Security Council, each member country of the Commonwealth has an equal vote in decision-making.
“The Commonwealth is a powerful organisation, but it needs a different outlook and a new approach to make it even more impactful,” the Cypriot Foreign Minister, Dr Constantinos Kombos, told Ms Botchwey at a separate meeting.
Commonwealth Heads of Government will elect a new Secretary-General at their next summit in October in the Pacific Island state of Samoa.
The new leader will replace Baroness Patricia Scotland, a British Dominican, whose final term ends this year.
Ms Botchwey, a lawyer, has served as Ghana’s foreign minister for nearly eight years, and is a member of Ghana’s National Security Council.
She was deputy Foreign Minister nearly 20 years ago, and chaired the Council of Ministers of ECOWAS, the West African regional body, from 2020 to 2022.
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