Former
human rights lawyer Nana Akufo-Addo is to be sworn in as Ghana's new president
at a ceremony in Independence Square in central Accra ©Pius Utomi Ekpei (AFP)
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Nana Akufo-Addo is to be
sworn in as Ghana's new president on Saturday after beating incumbent leader
John Dramani Mahama in elections last month.
AFP
report continues:
The
72-year-old former human rights lawyer will take the oath of office at a
ceremony in Independence Square in central Accra before more than 6,000 guests
and members of the public.
Some
11 heads of state from across Africa are expected to attend, as well as the
outgoing president, and former leaders John Rawlings and John Kufuor.
Police
in the capital have vowed to enforce tight security during the inauguration,
with major roads in and around the venue cordoned off.
Traders
have already set up their stalls nearby hoping to cash in on the ceremony by
selling Ghana flags and paraphernalia from Akufo-Addo's New Patriotic Party.
Akufo-Addo's
electoral victory -- and the peaceful transition of power -- underlined Ghana's
position as a beacon of stability in an often turbulent region.
- 'Gold standard for
democracy' -
One
international observer described the West African country as a "gold
standard for democracy in Africa".
The
new president told AFP that after smooth handovers of power in his home country
and places such as Nigeria, leaders wanting to stay in office at all costs were
"fighting the tide of history".
In
Nigeria -- known for contested elections and its violent aftermath -- Goodluck
Jonathan made an unprecedented concession to Muhammadu Buhari in 2015.
But
in the week of Akufo-Addo's election, beaten president Yahya Jammeh of The
Gambia promised to challenge the results of elections that he had previously
accepted.
Elsewhere
on the continent, there are numerous examples of leaders wanting to amend the
constitution to ensure more years in power.
Buhari
and other African leaders will meet for talks after the inauguration to discuss
the crisis in The Gambia caused by Jammeh's refusal to step down.
"A
major decision on the impasse is expected to be taken at that all-important
meeting," Buhari's spokesman Garba Shehu told reporters in Abuja.
"President
Buhari is the chief mediator in the crisis and he is committed to ensuring that
the logjam is resolved."
Akufo-Addo
has vowed to put the West African nation "back on the path of progress and
prosperity" after an economic slump under Mahama that led to an
International Monetary Fund bail-out.
This
week Mahama defended his record, saying his government had been up against
"strong headwinds" that caused growth to slow, public sector debt to
rise and the cedi currency to fall.
But the 58-year-old encouraged Ghanaians to get behind Akufo-Addo and on Wednesday showed his successor round the seat of government, Flagstaff House, in Accra.
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