1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
PoliticsGhana

Ghana agrees to accept West African deportees from US

Midhat Fatimah with AFP, Reuters
September 11, 2025

The first group of West African deportees from the US has already arrived in Ghana, President John Mahama has said. Notably, the deportation agreement comes amid the US levying increased tariffs on Ghanaian products.

John Dramani Mahama, former Ghanaian president and presidential candidate from the National Democratic Congress, speaks at a signing ceremony of the presidential election peace pact in Accra, Ghana, on Nov. 28, 2024
Ghanaian President John Mahama said relations between the US and Ghana are "tightening" but remain positive (FILE: November 28, 2024)Image: Seth/Xinhua/IMAGO

Ghana has agreed to accept West Africans deported from the US, Ghanaian President John Mahama said Wednesday.

Mahama said Ghana had agreed to take in nationals from West Africa, where a regional agreement allows visa-free travel.

"We were approached by the US to accept third-party nationals who were being removed from the US. And we agreed with them that West African nationals were acceptable," Mahama said.

The "first batch" of 14 people, which includes several Nigerians and one Gambian, has already arrived in Ghana, he told journalists.

Racism and discrimination in US immigration policy

26:04

This browser does not support the video element.

Mahama did not specify the number of deportees Ghana has agreed to accept.

Trump's crackdown on immigration

The deportation of undocumented immigrants to third countries — including places deportees have never lived — has been a key tactic of US President Donald Trump.

His administration has tried to strike a deal with multiple African countries about taking in deportees as part of its campaign to curb immigration through high-profile raids and deportations.

In the last couple of months, several undocumented immigrants were accepted by Rwanda, Eswatini and South Sudan.

Notably, the deportation agreement between the US and Ghana has come amid hiked tariffs on Ghanaian goods and visa restrictions for Ghanaian nationals.

Mahama said the relations between Accra and Washington are "tightening," though he added relations had remained positive.

Nigeria pushes back on third-party deportees from US

Another West African nation, Nigeria, has pushed back against accepting third-party deportees.

"The US is mounting considerable pressure on African countries to accept Venezuelans to be deported from the US, some straight out of prisons," Nigerian Foreign Minister Yusuf Tuggar told local broadcaster Channels Television in July.

"It will be difficult for Nigeria to accept Venezuelan prisoners," he said, hinting that recent tariff threats were related to the issue of deportations.

The Trump administration has overseen hundreds of deportations to Panama, including some for people who were not given time for their asylum applications to be processed. Hundreds of people have also been sent from the US to El Salvador, where many have been held in the notorious Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT, prison.

Edited by Sean Sinico

Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW