Ghana halts visit by South African president amid row over anti-migrant protests
Many in Ghana feared his presence would lead to mass protests, and officials say it is postponed for now.
President Cyril Ramaphosa was due to fly to Ghana next month
Ghana has postponed a visit by South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa following xenophobic rallies that resulted in hundreds of Ghanaians being repatriated from his country.
Ramaphosa had long planned a visit to Ghana in the first week of August, and it had been hoped this would help de-escalate tensions between the two nations.
But many in Ghana feared his presence would lead to mass protests there. On Tuesday, government spokesman Felix Kwakye Ofosu told the BBC the visit would not happen for the time being.
''We sent them a communication indicating that it would be best to defer the visit in view of the present climate around xenophobia," he explained.
South Africa has sought to play things down, with presidential spokesman Vincent Magwenya telling the BBC of the country's unwavering commitment to "deepening cooperation" between the "two sister nations" and "advancing the African Agenda".
"The two countries will continue to engage through diplomatic channels to identify a mutually convenient date," he said.
He added that it was not a state visit - as Ghanaian officials have described it - but the third in a series of bilateral meetings.
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Diplomatic tensions between the two nations heightened after a video went viral of Emmanuel Asamoah, a young Ghanaian living in South Africa, being confronted and told to ''go fix his country''.
Ghana has since repatriated more than 900 of its citizens from South Africa, and the last batch of over 900 others is expected to be brought home in the coming weeks.
Other African countries - including Nigeria, Malawi and Kenya - have also been repatriating their nationals from South Africa because of ongoing protests against foreigners. Some groups gave undocumented migrants a deadline of 30 June to leave the country and about 25,000 have been repatriated so far.
Ramaphosa has said that people have a right to protest as long as they were peaceful. He also said he would do more to tackle irregular migration.
Anti-foreigner protests have led to thousands of people fleeing South Africa for their home countries elsewhere on the continent
The row escalated last week when Ghana condemned the alleged killing of Bahiru Isak, a 40-year-old Ghanaian national living in the Khayelitsha suburb of Cape Town in South Africa. Ghanaian officials said he was killed during anti-immigration protest
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