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Saturday, March 14, 2026

Mahama installed as Patron of West African College of Surgeons

By Iddi Yire, GNA  

Accra, Feb 08, GNA – President John Dramani Mahama was on Monday installed as the Grand Patron of the West African College of Surgeons (WASC) for his visionary leadership in healthcare and surgical advancement in the West Africa subregion. 

The installation was conducted by Professor Ibrahim Adamu Yakasai, the President, WASC, during the 66th Annual General Scientific Meeting (AGSM) of the WACS at the University of Professional Studies, Accra (UPSA) in Accra. 

The WASC is a professional organization founded in 1960 and headquartered in Lagos, Nigeria, dedicated to training surgeons, establishing professional standards, and improving healthcare in 15 plus West African nations.  

It provides postgraduate education in eight faculties (including anaesthesia, orthopaedics, and surgery), conducts fellowship examinations and hosts an annual scientific conference.  

The week-long conference, on the theme, “Capacity Building in Surgery: Developing the Next Generation of Surgeons in West Africa,” is being attended by participants from across the globe. 

President Mahama expressed gratitude to the WASC for the honour done to him by naming him as Grand Patron of the Conference and admitting him as an Honorary Fellow of the distinguished institution. 

He noted that he accepts these recognitions on behalf of all the People of Ghana with humility and renewed commitment to support the work of the College because the work of surgeons was inseparable from the health, dignity and productivity of their people. 

The President commended the surgeons for the profession that they had chosen; declaring that they save many lives. 

He said the Accra Conference addresses a professional community that transcends national borders; and that it reflects their shared traditional aspirations and enduring partnerships. 

Ahead of the Accra Conference, the WASC organised a surgical outreach as a pre-conference activity from February 1st to February 7th. 

The week-long pre-conference surgery outreach programme put a smile back on the faces of 855 Ghanaians, across the country, who successfully underwent surgeries for different diseases. 

President Mahama extended his deepest appreciation to the volunteer surgeons, who used their professional skill to put the smiles on the faces of his countrymen and women across the country during the outreach. 

He urged the College to submit the outstanding bill for the cost of surgery to the Minister of Health for consideration. 

“We will take up that cost and still express appreciation to you for what you have done”.  

President Mahama said the West African College of Surgeons exemplifies what their sub-region could achieve when professionalism, shared standards and a common purpose guide their efforts.  

He noted that as an institution affiliated with the West African Health Organization, the College embodies the spirit of regional cooperation that their ECOWAS Community must continue to strengthen. 

President Mahama said over the decades, the WASC had trained and produced a significant proportion of the surgeons serving across their countries.  

He said for this enduring contribution, he conveys the appreciation of governments and people across their entire West Africa sub-region.  

The President acknowledged the pioneers who sufficiently laid the foundation of the WASC, including Dr Victor Anomah Ngu and Sir Samuel Manuwa; stating that their foresight continues to benefit generations of specialists and countless patients they serve.  

He said as a host nation, Ghana was proud of the contributions made by Ghanaian surgeons and teachers to the College’s growth and specialist training across West Africa.  

He recalled with profound respect the late Professor Emmanuel Augustus Badoe, Professors Emmanuel Quaye Archampong, Edward Kofi Donkor Yeboah, George Wireku-Brobbey, among many other eminent West African partners, whose scholarship and mentorship strengthen surgical training and service across their sub-region.  

He said their legacy reminds them that progress in healthcare was built on discipline, mentorship and service, and that behind every institutional milestone were individuals who pay a personal price so that others might live, learn, and thrive.  

President Mahama recalled that Professor John M.K. Quartey, who together with his two younger colleagues, Dr. Isaac Ben-Zi and Dr. Benjamin Osei-Biafi, tragically lost their lives while returning from a surgical outreach programme in Sunyani. 

He said their sacrifice remains a powerful reminder of their collective duty to build systems in which access to specialized care was not determined by geography and where quality of services was available to every community.  

Professor Ibrahim Adamu Yakasai,  the President, WASC, said the Accra Conference was focusing on innovative surgical training and research. 

GNA 

Edited by Benjamin Mensah 

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