By Prince Ahenkorah
Ghana’s former president turned comeback leader, John Dramani Mahama, touched down in France on Monday (6 April) for a three-day official visit that casts him as a co-star alongside Emmanuel Macron.
The French president has invited Mahama to co-chair the high-level segment of the One Health Summit in Lyon a rare diplomatic nod that elevates Accra’s profile in global health governance.
Mahama’s spokesperson, Felix Kwakye Ofosu, confirmed the trip, which also includes bilateral talks at the Élysée Palace on Wednesday. But the real spotlight is Lyon.
Today, Mahama will share the podium with Macron and WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, co-chairing a session on reforming the Global Health Architecture. He is slated to deliver two keynote addresses: one on the summit’s opening day, and another to launch the heads-of-state segment.
For a leader whose political brand rests partly on the Accra Reset Initiative a policy vehicle he founded after leaving office the summit offers valuable airtime.
The expected outcome is a Political Declaration to strengthen international health cooperation, with emphasis on pandemic preparedness, sustainable food systems, and health system resilience in Africa.
Mahama is likely to use his second speech to showcase Ghana’s commitments, hoping to translate diplomatic capital into investment and regional clout.
The itinerary suggests careful choreography. Before meeting Macron on Wednesday, Mahama will be received by Gérard Larcher, President of the French Senate a move that underscores interest in legislative as well as executive ties.
No major trade or aid announcements have been telegraphed, but Paris is watching West Africa’s shifting alliances.
Mahama’s return to Accra shortly after the Paris leg will leave analysts wondering whether the co-chairmanship yields concrete partnerships or remains a well-framed photo opportunity.
What is clear: Ghana is angling for a seat at the high table of global health politics. Whether that translates into stronger health systems at home or simply a stronger diplomatic CV for Mahama is the question that follows him back across the Channel.
