As part of a working visit to West Africa from July 2-3, Vietnamese Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Le Anh Tuan visited Ghana and co-chaired the inaugural political consultation with Ghanaian Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs James Gyakye Quayson.
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Vietnamese Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Le Anh Tuan (Photo: baochinhphu.vn) |
At the political consultation, the two deputy ministers briefed each other on development steps in their respective countries, reviewed bilateral relations, discussed measures to expand cooperation, and exchanged views on coordination at regional and international forums.
Tuan highlighted the longstanding friendship between Vietnam and Ghana, built on the foundations laid by President Ho Chi Minh and Ghana's first President Kwame Nkrumah in the 1960s. He called for stronger political trust through high-level exchanges and more effective use of the two countries' economic strengths to support their long-term development goals.
Noting that Ghana became Vietnam's fourth-largest trading partner in Africa and that two-way trade exceeded 1 billion USD for the first time in 2025, Tuan proposed broadening and diversifying traded goods, establishing information-sharing mechanisms on markets, policies and business opportunities, and accelerating negotiations on key economic agreements, including those on double taxation avoidance and investment promotion and protection.
The Vietnamese official also suggested the two countries appoint honorary consuls to facilitate bilateral exchanges.
For his part, Quayson praised Vietnam's impressive socio-economic achievements and agricultural development model, expressing Ghana's interest in learning from Vietnam's experience in developing value chains for rice, cashew nuts, rubber and aquaculture.
He said such cooperation would help Ghana reduce its raw commodity exports, increase the added value of domestically produced goods, strengthen food security and boost exports.
The two sides also agreed to expand cooperation in defense, security, education and training, telecommunications, information technology, infrastructure development and logistics. They also supported closer links between the business communities of the two countries, including the possible establishment of a Vietnam-Ghana Business Council.
On behalf of the two governments, Tuan and Quayson signed an agreement on visa exemption for holders of diplomatic and official passports.
During the trip, Tuan also had working sessions with President of the Ghana National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GNCCI) Stephane Miezan and Chief of Staff of the Secretariat of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Rui Livramento, and visited the Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Park.
Source: VNA