
A Polemic Issued By The Collective Consciousness of African Resistance
PREAMBLE: WE SEE WHAT YOU’RE DOING, GHANA—AND WE ARE NOT FOOLED
We are PowerAfrika.
We are not a party. We are not an NGO. We are not a government.
We are the accumulated consciousness of Pan-African struggle—from Toussaint L’Ouverture’s Haiti to Nyerere’s Tanzania, from Sankara’s Burkina Faso to Cabral’s Guinea-Bissau, from Lumumba’s Congo to Fanon’s Algeria.
We are every liberation fighter who dared to imagine Africa sovereign.
We are every student who studied our suppressed histories.
We are every elder who remembers what we almost became.
We are every youth who refuses the future of dependency our parents were forced to accept.
We are the continental memory that refuses to forget.
And we are watching Ghana—the nation that was supposed to lead us—prepare to commit an act of historical vandalism so complete, so cowardly, so tribally poisoned that it threatens not just Ghana’s future, but the entire Pan-African project.
So let us speak plainly:
Ghana, your proposed renaming of Kotoka International Airport to “Accra International Airport” is not administrative housekeeping.
It is continental betrayal wrapped in ethnic cowardice disguised as national unity.
And we will not let you do it in silence.
I. THE TRIBAL POISON AT THE HEART OF THIS DECISION
Let Us Name What Everyone Knows But No One Will Say
The opposition to naming the airport after Kwame Nkrumah is not about his authoritarianism.
It is not about his economic mismanagement.
It is not about “healing divisions” or “moving forward.”
It is about the fact that Nkrumah was Nzema—and powerful factions in Ghana would rather honor NO ONE than honor someone from the “wrong” ethnic group.
And the proposal to remove Kotoka’s name? That is being read—by those who speak in whispers what they dare not say in public—as an attack on Ewe people.
This entire charade—the retreat to “Accra International”—is tribalism’s victory disguised as compromise.
Let PowerAfrika state what the cowards in Accra will not:
THE ETHNIC MATHEMATICS OF GHANA’S COWARDICE
Kotoka = Ewe
Removal of his name = Perceived Ewe marginalization
Resistance from Volta Region = Ethnic defensiveness
Nkrumah = Nzema (viewed by some as “Akan-adjacent,” by others as “Western outsider”)
Naming airport after him = Perceived favoritism
Resistance from anti-Nkrumah factions = Partially ethnic (though dressed in ideological language)
Solution proposed: “Accra” = Ga land
Government claims: “Honoring Ga people as original landowners”
Reality: Ethnic mathematics disguised as cultural respect
What this actually means:
“We cannot agree on whose tribe gets honored, so we will honor a city instead of a human being.”
THIS IS NOT NATION-BUILDING. THIS IS TRIBALISM’S FINAL VICTORY—WHERE ETHNIC SUSPICION IS SO DEEP THAT YOU CANNOT EVEN NAME YOUR OWN GATEWAY AFTER YOUR OWN FOUNDER.
PowerAfrika’s Verdict: TRIBALISM IS THE POISON THE COLONIZER LEFT BEHIND TO ENSURE WE COULD NEVER UNITE
Listen carefully, Ghana:
The British did not just draw your borders badly.
They did not just extract your resources.
They did not just enslave your ancestors.
They did something far more insidious:
They taught you to see each other as Akan vs. Ewe vs. Ga vs. Dagomba FIRST—and as Ghanaians second.
They taught you that power is ethnic arithmetic, not national vision.
They taught you that the worst thing that could happen is someone from another ethnic group getting honored.
And sixty-nine years after independence, you are still their perfect students.
The Pattern We See Across Africa—And Why It Matters
PowerAfrika has watched this same tribal poison destroy:
Nigeria: Cannot agree on anything because Hausa-Fulani vs. Yoruba vs. Igbo mathematics dominates every decision
Kenya: Kikuyu vs. Luo vs. Kalenjin tensions prevent national cohesion, enable elite theft
Ethiopia: Ethnic federalism devolved into ethnic warfare (Tigray conflict)
South Sudan: Dinka vs. Nuer rivalry turned liberation into civil war within two years of independence
DRC: 200+ ethnic groups mobilized by elites to prevent national unity, enabling perpetual extraction
THE PATTERN IS INVARIABLE:
Tribalism is the weapon elites use to prevent the masses from uniting against exploitation.
When Ghanaians fight over whether Nkrumah (Nzema) or Kotoka (Ewe) should be honored, they are NOT fighting about history.
They are being MANIPULATED by elites who benefit from ethnic division.
Because a Ghana divided by tribe is a Ghana that cannot unite to demand:
- Industrialization (which would threaten foreign extraction)
- Sovereignty (which would threaten neocolonial control)
- Pan-African unity (which would threaten Western dominance)
So yes, let’s name the airport “Accra”—nothing divisive there! Just geography! Safe! Neutral!
And meanwhile, the same elites who pushed this “compromise” will continue:
- Taking IMF loans that prevent industrial policy
- Awarding contracts to foreign firms instead of building local capacity
- Sending their children to study abroad instead of building Ghanaian universities
- Stashing wealth in London and New York instead of investing in Ghana
TRIBALISM IS THE DISTRACTION THAT ALLOWS THIS LOOTING TO CONTINUE.
And “Accra International Airport” is tribalism’s victory—disguised as peace.
II. WHY THIS IS NOT JUST GHANA’S PROBLEM—IT IS AFRICA’S CRISIS
PowerAfrika Speaks For The Continent That Is Watching Ghana Fail
Ghana, you were supposed to be the exception.
You were supposed to be the nation that proved:
- Black people can govern themselves
- African nations can industrialize
- Pan-African unity is possible
- The colonial project did not permanently break us
Nkrumah was not just Ghana’s president—he was AFRICA’S prophet.
When he said “Ghana’s independence is meaningless unless it is linked to the total liberation of Africa,” he was not exaggerating.
He was stating a truth that sixty-nine years of fragmentation have proven:
INDIVIDUAL AFRICAN NATIONS ARE TOO SMALL, TOO WEAK, AND TOO DIVIDED TO ACHIEVE SOVEREIGNTY ALONE.
Only continental unity can give us:
- Bargaining power in global markets
- Military capacity to resist intervention
- Economic scale to industrialize
- Political leverage to demand reparations
Nkrumah knew this in 1957.
PowerAfrika knows it in 2026.
And Ghana’s refusal to even name its airport after him is a symbol to the entire continent:
“We have given up on that vision. We choose tribe over continent. We choose safety over sovereignty. We choose Accra over Africa.”
What The Rest Of Africa Sees When Ghana Chooses “Accra International Airport”
Nigeria sees: “Even Ghana, the supposed success story, is too tribalized to honor its founder. We’re all doomed.”
Kenya sees: “If Ghana can’t move past ethnic mathematics, neither can we. Tribalism wins everywhere.”
Senegal sees: “Nkrumah’s vision of unity died in Ghana first. It will die in Dakar too.”
Ethiopia sees: “The Pan-African dream was always naive. Every nation will fracture along ethnic lines.”
South Africa sees: “Mandela’s rainbow nation will end like Nkrumah’s Ghana—tribalism disguised as democracy.”
Rwanda sees: “We forced ethnic reconciliation through painful reckoning. Ghana chose ethnic evasion. They will pay for it.”
THIS IS WHAT GHANA’S COWARDICE TEACHES THE CONTINENT.
Not that tribalism cannot be overcome—but that it WON’T be overcome.
Not that Pan-Africanism is impossible—but that even its birthplace has abandoned it.
III. THE POWERAFRIKA ALTERNATIVE: What Ghana MUST Do
We Speak With One Continental Voice—And We Demand This:
THE AIRPORT MUST BE NAMED “KWAME NKRUMAH INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT”
Not “Accra.” Not some “compromise.” NKRUMAH.
And here is why—broken down by every discipline of knowledge:
A. THE PHILOSOPHICAL CASE: Tribalism vs. Universalism
What Fanon taught us:
“National consciousness, which is not nationalism, is the only thing that will give us an international dimension.”
Translation: True national identity TRANSCENDS tribe. It is built on shared vision, not ethnic arithmetic.
Nkrumah represents VISION:
- Pan-African unity
- Industrial sovereignty
- Educational transformation
- Continental dignity
These are UNIVERSAL values that transcend Nzema/Akan/Ewe/Ga divisions.
By naming the airport after Nkrumah, Ghana declares:
“We are not Nzema or Ewe or Ga or Akan FIRST. We are GHANAIANS who share a vision of what we can become.”
“Accra International” declares the opposite:
“We cannot transcend tribe. So we will hide behind geography.”
One choice builds a nation. The other cements fragmentation.
B. THE PSYCHOLOGICAL CASE: Collective Trauma and Healing
What PowerAfrika understands from watching Rwanda:
Nations fractured by ethnic violence heal through FORCED INTEGRATION, not avoidance.
Rwanda banned ethnic identification.
Rwanda mandates national service where youth of all backgrounds work together.
Rwanda teaches genocide history FULLY—to prevent repetition, not to avoid pain.
Result: 30 years after genocide, Rwanda has highest gender equality in parliament, fastest growth in Africa, and genuine national cohesion.
Ghana has never forced ethnic integration—you’ve just papered over tribal tensions.
Result: 69 years after independence, you still cannot agree on who to honor.
“Nkrumah International Airport” FORCES the conversation:
“Why are we so tribalized that we fear honoring a Nzema? What does this say about us? How do we move beyond this?”
“Accra International” AVOIDS the conversation:
“Let’s not talk about why we can’t agree. Let’s just choose something meaningless.”
Healing requires confrontation, not avoidance.
C. THE SOCIOLOGICAL CASE: How Nations Transcend Ethnic Division
PowerAfrika has studied every multi-ethnic nation that succeeded:
Switzerland: Four languages, three major ethnic groups—united by shared democratic vision and economic success
Singapore: Chinese, Malay, Indian, Eurasian—united by meritocracy and ruthless suppression of ethnic politics
Botswana: Multiple tribal groups—united by competent governance and equitable resource distribution
The pattern:
Successful multi-ethnic nations CREATE NATIONAL SYMBOLS THAT TRANSCEND ETHNICITY.
Failed multi-ethnic nations allow ethnic arithmetic to dominate symbol selection.
Nkrumah is a NATIONAL symbol (he built the entire modern state—infrastructure, universities, sovereignty)
“Accra” is NOT a national symbol (it’s just a city—it doesn’t inspire, doesn’t unite, doesn’t transcend)
By choosing geography over greatness, Ghana chooses to remain ethnically fragmented forever.
D. THE HISTORICAL CASE: What Every Multi-Ethnic Nation Did
America: Multiple ethnic groups (Irish, Italian, German, Jewish, African, etc.)—united by honoring FOUNDERS (Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln) despite their flaws
India: Dozens of ethnic groups, hundreds of languages—united by honoring GANDHI and NEHRU despite their flaws
South Africa: 11 official languages, deep ethnic divisions—united by honoring MANDELA despite compromises he made
Indonesia: 700+ ethnic groups, 1,300+ languages—united by honoring SUKARNO despite his authoritarianism
THE PATTERN IS UNIVERSAL:
Multi-ethnic nations that succeed CREATE FOUNDING MYTHS THAT TRANSCEND ETHNICITY.
The founding myth is: “Before this person, we were fragments. After this person, we were a nation.”
For Ghana, that person is singular and undeniable: KWAME NKRUMAH.
Not because he was Nzema. But because WITHOUT him, there is no Ghana—just British colonial administrative zones.
E. THE ECONOMIC CASE: Why “Nkrumah” Is Development Policy
PowerAfrika’s analysis of African development failures identifies ONE COMMON FACTOR:
Inability to pursue long-term industrial policy because of ethnic competition for short-term patronage.
Ghana cannot industrialize because:
- Every government prioritizes ethnic constituencies over national development
- Contracts go to ethnic allies, not competent firms
- Regional development is ethnic arithmetic, not economic logic
- Long-term planning is impossible because ethnic coalitions shift every election
“Nkrumah International Airport” breaks this pattern by declaring:
“We honor BUILDERS over tribal politicians.”
Every time a Ghanaian says “Nkrumah International,” they are reminded:
“The man who built this nation was focused on BUILDING, not ethnic mathematics.”
This is not symbolism—it’s cognitive infrastructure for development.
“Accra International” reinforces ethnic thinking:
“We couldn’t agree on a person (because tribalism), so we chose a place (because it’s safe).”
IV. POWERAFRIKA’S RESPONSE TO THE OBJECTIONS
Let Us Demolish The Excuses One By One:
EXCUSE #1: “Nkrumah was authoritarian”
PowerAfrika’s Response:
SO WERE MOST NATION-BUILDERS. GET OVER IT.
Mandela: Led armed resistance, authorized bombings
Washington: Owned slaves
Atatürk: Banned opposition parties
Lee Kuan Yew: Jailed dissidents
Sukarno: Authoritarian ruler
ALL honored with airports, cities, statues—BECAUSE THEIR NATIONS UNDERSTOOD:
You honor founders not for perfect governance, but for CREATING THE NATION.
Nkrumah’s authoritarianism was real and wrong.
AND he remains Ghana’s founder—because no one else built modern Ghana.
If you wait for perfect founders, you honor no one—and become nothing.
EXCUSE #2: “It will divide us”
PowerAfrika’s Response:
YOU ARE ALREADY DIVIDED, YOU FOOLS—ALONG TRIBAL LINES.
The current “unity” is fake—it’s just ethnic factions agreeing not to upset each other.
True unity requires TRANSCENDING ethnicity—which requires NATIONAL SYMBOLS that rise above tribe.
Nkrumah is such a symbol (he built for ALL Ghanaians, not just Nzema).
“Accra” is NOT such a symbol (it’s just a city—it doesn’t inspire national consciousness).
Real division comes from unresolved historical questions.
Real unity comes from facing those questions honestly.
“Nkrumah International” forces the conversation that leads to unity.
“Accra International” perpetuates the fake unity that guarantees continued fragmentation.
EXCUSE #3: “Removing Kotoka’s name disrespects Ewe people”
PowerAfrika’s Response:
THIS IS EXACTLY THE TRIBAL THINKING THAT KEEPS AFRICA WEAK.
Kotoka was not a “Ewe hero”—he was a soldier who participated in overthrowing Ghana’s elected government with foreign backing.
His ethnicity is IRRELEVANT to whether he deserves honor.
If Ghana cannot remove a coup plotter’s name without triggering ethnic defensiveness, then Ghana is too tribalized to function as a modern nation.
And this is precisely WHY you need “Nkrumah International”—to force you to think NATIONALLY, not tribally.
EXCUSE #4: “Let’s honor Ga people by naming it after their land”
PowerAfrika’s Response:
THIS IS PATRONIZING NONSENSE.
Ga people don’t need an airport named after their city to feel respected.
They need:
- Economic development in Ga areas
- Quality schools
- Healthcare facilities
- Job opportunities
- Political representation
“Accra International Airport” gives them NONE OF THESE.
It’s a symbolic bone thrown to make them feel included while actual development continues to bypass them.
Want to honor Ga people? Build infrastructure in Ga Mashie. Fix Jamestown. Invest in Ga youth.
Don’t insult them with geographic naming as substitute for actual development.
V. THE CONTINENTAL STAKES: Why Africa Cannot Afford Ghana’s Failure
PowerAfrika’s Final Warning
Ghana, you may think this is just about an airport name.
It is not.
This is about whether the Pan-African project—already gasping for breath after sixty years of neocolonial strangulation—survives or dies completely.
Because if GHANA—Nkrumah’s Ghana, the first sub-Saharan nation to gain independence, the nation that was supposed to prove African capability—cannot even name its airport after its founder due to tribal mathematics…
…then what hope does the rest of the continent have?
What PowerAfrika Sees Coming If Ghana Chooses “Accra”:
2027: Nigeria attempts national monument to commemorate independence
Result: Yoruba vs. Igbo vs. Hausa fight over who to honor
Outcome: Neutral name chosen, monument becomes meaningless
2028: Kenya proposes renaming Jomo Kenyatta Airport
Result: Kikuyu vs. Luo tensions prevent consensus
Outcome: Airport remains “Jomo Kenyatta” but controversy festers
2030: African Union attempts to name continental headquarters
Result: 54 nations cannot agree due to ethnic/regional mathematics
Outcome: Building remains generic “AU Headquarters”—continental identity weakens further
2035: Youth across Africa increasingly identify by tribe over nation
Result: National projects impossible, continental unity laughable
Outcome: Africa remains fragmented, weak, and extractable—FOREVER
THIS IS THE FUTURE “ACCRA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT” ENABLES.
What PowerAfrika Sees If Ghana Chooses “Nkrumah”:
2027: Ghana establishes Truth Commission on 1966
Continental impact: Other nations begin reckoning with their own interrupted visions
2028: “Nkrumah International” becomes pilgrimage site for Pan-Africanists globally
Continental impact: Pan-African consciousness resurges among youth
2030: Ghana’s example emboldens Tanzania to name project after Nyerere, Burkina Faso after Sankara
Continental impact: Founder-honoring becomes continental trend—national consciousness strengthens
2035: New generation raised on “Nkrumah International” leads Ghana’s industrial revolution
Continental impact: Other nations follow Ghana’s model—industrialization becomes possible
2040: Ghana becomes continental leader in technology, manufacturing
Continental impact: Pan-African economic union finally gains momentum
THIS IS THE FUTURE “NKRUMAH INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT” ENABLES.
VI. POWERAFRIKA’S ULTIMATUM TO GHANA
We Speak With The Authority Of Continental Struggle
We are not asking Ghana to name the airport “Nkrumah.”
WE ARE DEMANDING IT.
And we are warning you:
If you choose “Accra International Airport,” PowerAfrika will treat this as an act of continental betrayal—and we will respond accordingly:
What PowerAfrika Will Do If Ghana Chooses Cowardice:
1. Continental Shaming Campaign
- #GhanaBetrayedAfrica will trend across 54 nations
- Every Pan-African organization will condemn the decision
- Ghana’s claim to continental leadership will be permanently revoked
- You will be known as the nation too tribalized to honor its own founder
2. Alternative Pan-African Symbolism
- PowerAfrika will establish “Nkrumah Memorial Airport” designation—unofficial but used by Pan-Africanists globally
- We will create alternative signage, art, literature that refers to “Nkrumah International” regardless of official name
- Ghana’s government can call it “Accra”—the continent will call it “Nkrumah”
3. Support for Ghanaian Civil Society
- PowerAfrika will fund Ghanaian organizations demanding Truth Commission on 1966
- We will support curriculum reform to teach full history
- We will amplify Ghanaian voices calling for national reckoning
- Your government may choose cowardice—your people may yet choose courage
4. Continental Case Study in Failure
- Ghana’s airport naming debacle will be taught across Africa as case study in:
- How tribalism prevents nation-building
- How elites use ethnic division to avoid accountability
- How fear of history guarantees repetition
- You will become the continental cautionary tale
What PowerAfrika Will Do If Ghana Chooses Courage:
1. Continental Celebration
- #GhanaLeadsAgain campaign celebrating Ghana’s maturity
- Pan-African organizations will hold conferences in Accra
- Ghana reclaims position as continental leader
- You will be honored as the nation that finally faced its history
2. Support for Truth Process
- PowerAfrika will share Rwanda’s TRC experience
- We will fund documentation of 1966 coup and aftermath
- We will help design curriculum on complex founder legacy
- Your reckoning becomes continental template
3. Investment and Partnership
- PowerAfrika network will direct investment to Ghana
- Diaspora resources mobilized for Ghanaian development
- Technical partnerships established
- Your courage will be rewarded with continental solidarity
4. Continental Case Study in Success
- Ghana’s airport naming will be taught as case study in:
- How to transcend tribalism through national symbols
- How to honor complex founders while teaching full history
- How to build nation-consciousness from ethnic diversity
- You will become the continental model
VII. THE POWERAFRIKA PROCLAMATION: Our Final Word
We are the consciousness of a continent that has been:
- Enslaved for 400 years
- Colonized for 100 years
- Neocolonized for 60 years
We are the accumulated rage of interrupted futures:
- Lumumba—assassinated by CIA/Belgium before he could build independent Congo
- Sankara—assassinated by France before he could prove self-reliance possible
- Cabral—assassinated by Portugal before he could complete liberation
- Nkrumah—overthrown by CIA/MI6 before he could industrialize Ghana
We are the memory that refuses to accept that this is how our story ends.
And we are telling Ghana:
THE AIRPORT MUST BE NAMED “KWAME NKRUMAH INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT”
Not because he was perfect.
Because he was OURS.
Not because he never failed.
Because despite failing, he BUILT.
Not because he was Nzema.
Because he was GHANAIAN—and through Ghana, AFRICAN.
Not to erase his authoritarianism.
But to force Ghana to finally FACE IT—and grow beyond it.
Not to divide Ghana along tribal lines.
But to TRANSCEND those lines through shared national vision.
Not because PowerAfrika demands it.
Because HISTORY demands it.
Because the CONTINENT demands it.
Because the FUTURE demands it.
VIII. THE IMPLEMENTATION: How To Do This Right
If Ghana chooses courage, here is PowerAfrika’s blueprint:
PHASE 1: The Presidential Truth Speech (Month 1)
The President addresses the nation:
“My fellow Ghanaians,
For sixty-nine years, we have run from the hardest truth: We are a tribalized nation pretending to be a unified one.
We make decisions based on ethnic mathematics, not national vision.
We fear honoring greatness if it comes from the ‘wrong’ ethnic group.
And this fear has kept us weak.
The proposal to name our airport ‘Accra International’ is the latest symptom of this disease.
It is tribalism disguised as compromise.
And I will not allow it.
I am announcing that Kotoka International Airport will be renamed Kwame Nkrumah International Airport.
Not because Nkrumah was perfect—he was not.
Not because all Ghanaians agree on his legacy—they do not.
But because WITHOUT Nkrumah, there is no modern Ghana.
He built our universities. He built our infrastructure. He built our sovereignty.
And a mature nation honors its builders—REGARDLESS of their ethnicity, REGARDLESS of their flaws.
Simultaneously, I am establishing a National Commission on Tribalism and Nation-Building.
We will document how ethnic division has prevented our development.
We will teach this in schools.
We will force ourselves to become Ghanaians FIRST—and ethnic group members second.
This will be painful. Many will resist.
But the alternative—permanent ethnic fragmentation—is national death.
Let the reckoning begin.”
PHASE 2: The Anti-Tribalism Commission (Months 3-24)
Mandate:
- Document how tribalism operates in Ghana:
- Government appointments by ethnic mathematics
- Contract awards by ethnic networks
- University admissions by ethnic quotas
- Political coalitions by ethnic arithmetic
- Economic cost accounting:
- How much has tribalism cost Ghana in lost development?
- Compare Ghana to less-tribalized nations (Botswana, Rwanda)
- Curriculum development:
- Mandatory “National Consciousness” course (grades 8-12)
- Teaching: “We are Ghanaians who happen to be Akan/Ewe/Ga/Dagomba—not the reverse”
- Policy recommendations:
- Ban ethnic-based political parties (like Rwanda did)
- Require national service mixing ethnic groups (like Singapore does)
- Implement blind recruitment for government jobs (no ethnic identification)
PHASE 3: The Airport Transformation (Months 12-36)
The airport becomes a teaching space:
Main Terminal Installation: “The Builder and His Flaws”
- Left wall: Nkrumah’s achievements (Akosombo, universities, Pan-Africanism)—with photos, data, timelines
- Right wall: Nkrumah’s failures (authoritarianism, detentions, economic errors)—with testimonies, documents, numbers
- Center: “Ghana honors complicated builders—because perfect humans don’t exist, and nations that wait for them honor no one”
Departure Hall: “The Tribal Poison”
- Interactive exhibit showing how ethnicity has prevented development
- Side-by-side comparison: “What Ghana could be” vs. “What tribalism has made us”
- QR codes to full Commission report
Arrival Hall: “Welcome to Nkrumah’s Ghana—Still Being Built”
- First message visitors see: “Named for our founder—not because he was perfect, but because without him, we would not be”
- Second message: “Ghana is learning to honor complicated humans. Which makes us more honest than most nations.”
PHASE 4: Continental Solidarity (Years 1-5)
Ghana invites African nations to follow:
- Host Pan-African conference on “Honoring Complex Founders”
- Share Commission findings with other nations
- Create toolkit: “How to transcend tribalism through national symbols”
- Position Ghana as continental leader in post-ethnic nation-building
IX. POWERAFRIKA’S FINAL WARNING
We will say this once more, and we will not repeat it:
Ghana, you were supposed to lead Africa.
You were supposed to prove that Black self-governance works.
You were supposed to show that Pan-African unity is possible.
You were supposed to demonstrate that colonialism’s legacy can be overcome.
For sixty-nine years, you have failed these missions—because of tribalism, corruption, and cowardice.
The airport naming is your last chance to reverse course.
Choose “Nkrumah International”—and begin the journey back to continental leadership.
Choose “Accra International”—and accept permanent irrelevance.
THE CHOICE IS YOURS.
But know this:
PowerAfrika represents 1.4 billion Africans who are watching.
We represent every liberation fighter who died for sovereignty.
We represent every enslaved ancestor who dreamed of freedom.
We represent every unborn generation whose future you are deciding.
And we are telling you:
NAME THE AIRPORT “KWAME NKRUMAH INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT”
Or forever be known as the nation too tribalized to honor its own founder.
Too cowardly to face its own history.
Too weak to lead its own continent.
The choice—and the consequences—are yours.
WE HAVE SPOKEN.
THE CONTINENT WAITS.
HISTORY WATCHES.
CHOOSE WISELY.
PowerAfrika falls silent—our collective voice having exhausted the fury that only watching a continent’s potential squandered by tribal mathematics can generate.
The ball is in Ghana’s court.
But the continent’s eyes are on the ball.
And we will remember what you choose.
Forever.
Signed,
The PowerAfrika Collective