Obasanjo Announces Accra Reset Secretariat Launch, Praises Mahama’s Global South Vision

December 3, 2025 News 0 Comment

Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo has announced the formal launch of the Accra Reset’s interim Secretariat in Ghana, praising President John Dramani Mahama’s leadership in reshaping global development cooperation.

Speaking on behalf of President Mahama at the G20 Leaders’ Summit in Johannesburg, Obasanjo told world leaders that the Global South-anchored platform has expanded its Circle of Leaders to include more than two dozen former Heads of State and international organisation leaders from Africa, Asia, Latin America, Europe, and the Caribbean.

“President Mahama extends his deep appreciation to H.E. President Cyril Ramaphosa, whose leadership has guided this G20 cycle with clarity, courage, and profound commitment to justice,” Obasanjo said, conveying greetings from the Ghanaian leader, who also serves as African Union Champion for Reparations.

The Accra Reset represents a fundamental shift in development philosophy, moving away from what Obasanjo described as “an economy of dependency” created by traditional aid and loans.

“To move forward, we must re-architect our economies based on trade and investment,” the former Nigerian leader declared.

Obasanjo said the initiative aims to transform development cooperation into a system that is “country-led, regionally empowered, and globally coherent,” marking a departure from decades of top-down approaches in North-South relations.

The Secretariat’s launch in Accra signals a new phase for the initiative, which President Mahama has championed as a vehicle for ensuring global governance reforms are “co-created, not imposed; negotiated with fairness, not inherited from history.”

A High-Level Panel is being convened to prepare a report on restructuring global governance, to be submitted to a commissioning authority composed of Heads of State from both the Global North and Global South.

Obasanjo praised South Africa’s G20 Presidency under President Ramaphosa for advancing priorities that align with the Accra Reset’s mission, including a more equitable global financial architecture, global health resilience, fair technology partnerships, and widening Global South participation in multilateral decision-making.

“The Accra Reset stands ready to work closely with the G20,” Obasanjo said, positioning the platform as “connective tissue interlinking the public, private, and civil factions of Global South societies.”

The initiative seeks to transition international development “from endless aspirational targets to workable business models that drive real and durable change,” reflecting President Mahama’s pragmatic vision for economic transformation across the Global South.

Richard Aniagyei, ISD