By James Amoh Junior
Accra, 15 June, GNA – Ghana has lost one of her most accomplished diplomats, statesmen, and public servants with the passing of Ambassador James Victor Gbeho.
For more than five decades, he carried Ghana’s voice with dignity across Africa and the world, serving with quiet strength and unwavering commitment.
Ambassador Gbeho died on 13 June 2026 at the age of 91, leaving behind a legacy etched in diplomacy, governance, peacebuilding, and regional integration.
From representing Ghana at the highest levels of the United Nations to leading the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), his life was defined by a belief that dialogue and cooperation could heal even the deepest divisions.
Born on 12 January 1935 in Keta, Volta Region, Ambassador Gbeho came from a family woven into the fabric of the nation. He was the son of Philip Gbeho, the composer who arranged Ghana’s national anthem — a melody he carried with him into every negotiation room.
Trained as a lawyer, Ambassador Gbeho joined Ghana’s Foreign Service and began a diplomatic journey that would make him one of the country’s most respected envoys.
Over more than three decades, he served in China, India, Nigeria, Germany, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland.
His rise reflected both competence and trust: Deputy High Commissioner to the UK from 1972 to 1976, then Ghana’s Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the UN in Geneva, and for a decade from 1980 to 1990, Ghana’s voice at UN headquarters in New York.
He also held concurrent accreditation to Cuba, Jamaica, and Trinidad and Tobago.
Those years were marked by a world in flux. As the Cold War drew to a close, Ambassador Gbeho stood firm for Ghana’s interests, advocating calmly but resolutely in rooms where the future of nations was being decided.
His reputation extended far beyond Ghana’s borders. In July 1994, he was appointed Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General to Somalia, working to bring stability to a nation shattered by war. A year later, President Jerry John Rawlings entrusted him as ECOWAS Special Representative for Liberia.
In the midst of civil war and despair, he became a quiet architect of peace, pushing for constitutional governance and reconciliation when hope felt scarce.
In 1997, he moved from diplomacy to public service at home, serving as Minister of Foreign Affairs under President Rawlings.
He shaped Ghana’s foreign policy during a delicate period of democratic consolidation, strengthening ties with partners and restoring confidence in Ghana’s place in the world.
In 2001, he entered Parliament as Member of Parliament for Anlo, serving until 2005. Even after leaving the House, his counsel remained sought after, leading to his role as foreign policy adviser to President John Evans Atta Mills.
One of the crowning moments of his career came in February 2010, when West African leaders unanimously elected him President of the ECOWAS Commission. Until 2012, he guided the organisation through a critical phase of institutional reform and regional cooperation, transforming the former Executive Secretariat into the ECOWAS Commission we know today.
The ECOWAS Commission, announcing his passing, recalled his steady hand during a pivotal period. “His leadership advanced regional integration, strengthened institutional structures, and enhanced ECOWAS’ standing as one of Africa’s most successful regional organisations,” it said.
The Commission also remembered his earlier role in Liberia, describing him as a seasoned diplomat whose commitment to peace and public service never wavered.
In 2025, Ghana’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs honoured him as one of the country’s diplomatic giants, recognising his role in shaping Ghana’s foreign policy and elevating its global reputation.
Colleagues remember him not for grand speeches, but for quiet effectiveness. He was calm, thoughtful, and principled — a diplomat who listened more than he spoke, and who believed that consensus was stronger than confrontation. In an era often defined by noise, his measured voice stood out.
As tributes pour in from Ghana, West Africa, and across the world, there is a shared sense of loss for a man who gave his life to service.
The ECOWAS Commission, in its condolence message to President John Dramani Mahama, the Government, the people of Ghana, and Ambassador Gbeho’s family, described him as “an accomplished diplomat, an esteemed regional leader, and a dedicated servant of peace and integration.”
A summation of a life dedicated to one’s country with no pre conditions.
GNA
Reporter: James Amoh Junior
Email : [email protected]
Edited by Samuel Osei-Frempong