Brazil’s Lula Celebrates Samba and Feijoada in Ghana

Brazilian President, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, said yesterday that “visiting Ghana is more than a political visit, more than a visit by a head of State – it must be viewed as a visit from a brother, a companion who belongs to a nation that owes part of its culture and part of what Brazil is today to the people of Ghana.”

In a salute to government authorities prior to his meeting with President John Kufuor and the parallel meetings between Ministers of the two countries, Lula mentioned feijoada (bean stew), joy, and samba as part of Brazil’s African heritage.


The visit, which lasted under 24 hours, occurs at a moment when cooperation and economic and commercial exchanges between the two countries are intensifying.


Since 2003, Ghana has been the fourth largest importer of Brazilian products in sub-Saharan Africa, after South Africa, Nigeria, and Angola.


Bilateral trade has grown 600% in two years, from around US$ 30 million in 2002 to around US$ 170 million in 2004.


An impulse to this growth was imparted by the II Meeting of the Brazil-Ghana Mixed Commission, in Brasí­lia, in August, 2004, nearly 18 years after the Commission’s inaugural encounter.


To stimulate further business between the two countries, a bilateral agreement was ratified yesterday for the establishment of flights between Brazil and Ghana. A second agreement, this one on political consultations, was also signed.


Another agreement, concluded in Brazil, according to the Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, provides for the transfer of resources to restore Brazil House, in Accra.


The residence, which was built in the beginning of the 19th century by the Tabom community, composed of descendants of Brazilian slaves of Ghanian origin who returned to Africa, is considered an important symbol of the historical and cultural ties that join Brazil and Africa.


It is estimated that the joint restoration project will cost US$ 200 thousand.


The President was feted by the Tabom at a ceremony that lasted nearly two hours and offered a banquet by the President of Ghana at the International Conference Center. Before departing this morning for Guinea-Bissau, Lula inaugurated the Brazil-Ghana Chamber of Commerce.


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

After Talking to Blair and Merkel Brazil Lula’s Is Hopeful on WTO Accord

Speaking this Monday, May 15, to Brazilians on his weekly radio program, "Breakfast with ...

Finance Minister Says Brazil Has Been Crippled by Rich Countries and Lack of Credit

According to Brazilian Finance minister Guido Mantega, Brazil’s economy is walking with “two crippled ...

Brazilian Beef Industry Has Plans to Weather the Crisis

Beef exports by Brazil, from January to November, totaled US$ 5 billion, representing growth ...

Brazil’s Embraer Gets Ecuador Order for 7 Jets

TAME Linea Aerea del Ecuador, the state-run Ecuadorian airline, and Embraer announced at a ...

Brazil Proposes Brazilian Center at National Australian University

Brazil and Australia, represented by their Foreign Ministers, Alexander Downer and Celso Amorim, during ...

Gol Gets Its 100th Aircraft, a Boeing 737 Especially Designed for Brazil

With the delivery of its new Boeing, Brazilian Airline Gol and its subsidiary Varig ...

Abbott Blinks First and Brazil Gets Its AIDS-Drug Discount

Some 23,000 people in Brazil use the AIDS drug, Kaletra, made by the Abbott ...

Gabeira, a Do-gooder Brazilian Politico Among Foxes Devouring Public Chickens

Brazil’s leading news magazine, Veja, praised Congressman Fernando Gabeira as “the champion of ethics ...

No Change in View for US’s Meddling in Latin-American Affairs

Few will find fault with the conclusion that U.S.-Latin American policy has long been ...

Energy Diversity Makes Brazil’s Sovereign Rating Stronger

For Regina Nunes, the Standard and Poor's chairman in Brazil, "Diversity of energy sources ...