SPEAKER BAGBIN DECRIES FOREIGN AID TIED TO  “ALIEN” CULTURAL PARADIGMS, SAYS AFRICA MUST LEGISLATE FROM OWN HERITAGE

SPEAKER BAGBIN DECRIES FOREIGN AID TIED TO  “ALIEN” CULTURAL PARADIGMS, SAYS AFRICA MUST LEGISLATE FROM OWN HERITAGE
Rt. Hon. Alban Kingsford Sumana Bagbin, Speaker of Ghana’s Parliament and Chairperson of the Inter-Parliamentary Union of Africa

Rt. Hon. Alban Kingsford Sumana Bagbin, Speaker of Ghana’s Parliament and Chairperson of the Inter-Parliamentary Union of Africa, has criticized the practice of tying development assistance and trade deals to legal and cultural norms he described as “alien to our social cultural fabric.”  

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JH Data Bundle

“Our constitutions empower parliament to act as the breach between traditional heritage and modern statutory law. When African parliaments legislate on the family we fulfill a direct legitimate constitutional command,” he told delegates.  

But he warned of a “troubling narrative” in recent years where aid, trade agreements, natural resource deals, and bilateral cooperation are made conditional on adopting external legal and cultural frameworks.  

“Development assistance, trade agreements, natural resource agreements and bilateral cooperation have been made contingent upon the adoption of legal and cultural paradigms alien to our social cultural fabric,” Bagbin stated.  

Rt. Hon. Alban Kingsford Sumana Bagbin, also condemned the practice of making aid contingent on adopting foreign legal and cultural norms, saying it breaches the United Nations Charter.  

Speaking at the 4th African Inter-Parliamentary Conference on Family Sovereignty and Values in Accra, Bagbin said development assistance and trade deals are increasingly being made “contingent upon the adoption of legal and cultural patterns alien to our social cultural” fabric.