Patrick Dankwa Anin Explained
Patrick Dankwa Anin (27 July 1928 – 24 October 1999)[1] was a foreign minister of Ghana in the Second Republic.He died in 1999.[2]
He was the first foreign minister to be appointed in the Progress Party government by Dr. Kofi Abrefa Busia, the Prime Minister of Ghana. He served for a few months and was replaced by Victor Owusu. He was reappointed later the same year and held the position for two years.
Anin served on a five-man Presidential Commission into Bribery and Corruption in 1970.[3]
He also served as a Supreme Court judge from 1980 after having been nominated by President Limann.[4]
He died on 24 October 1999.[5]
Works
- Anin . Patrick Dankwa . 1991 . The role of the judiciary in the promotion and protection of human rights : the Gambian experience . African Journal of International and Comparative Law . 3 . 4 . 771–784 .
See also
Notes and References
- Book: The International Who's who 2000. 9781857430509. Publication. Europe. 63Rd. Ed. 1999.
- Web site: Foreign ministers E-K - Ghana . 2007-04-12 . B. Schemmel . Lists of heads of state of government and ministers of various countries . Rulers.org.
- Web site: Aryee . Joseph Atsu . THE ROOTS OF CORRUPTION: THE GHANAIAN ENQUIRY REVISITED . www.africaportal.org . The Institute of Economic Affairs, Ghana . 29 March 2020 . Accra, Ghana . 27 . 2016.
- Judiciary Urged to Ensure Democratic Rule . Ghana News . October 1980 . 9 . 10 . 6 . 24 November 2019.
- Web site: Ghana . 2007-04-12 . nl . GroundWet Europa.