PREZ. MAHAMA, YOU'RE WRONG ON PRESIDENT NICOLÁS MADURO SAGA
MOST GHANAIANS DON’T SUPPORT YOUR INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND DIPLOMATIC POLICIES.

SOVEREIGNTY IS NOT A LICENCE TO CRUSH HUMANITY
Why Trump’s Action Against Venezuela’s President Exposed Global Hypocrisy
National sovereignty was never meant to be a shield for criminality. It exists to protect the innocent, not to insulate the powerful from accountability. When sovereignty is invoked to excuse repression, torture, mass displacement, narco-crime, election fraud, or systematic abuse of civilians, it ceases to be law and becomes legalised cruelty.
History is unequivocal:
Crimes against humanity do not become moral because they occur within borders.
Genocide does not become culture.
Repression does not become tradition.
And brutality does not become lawful simply because a flag is flying over it.
“Show me your friends, and I will show you your character.”
“Birds of the same feather flock together.”
Any nation, bloc, or leader that defends, excuses, or sanitises leaders who brutalise innocent, non-aggressive, law-abiding citizens is not neutral. They are complicit. Silence in the face of bloodshed is not diplomacy; it is moral surrender.
WHY TRUMP’S ACTION MATTERS
President Donald Trump’s decision to authorise the capture of Venezuela’s president was not an act of imperial arrogance, as critics allege, but a moral disruption to a dangerous global habit: allowing criminal leadership to hide behind sovereignty while exporting suffering across borders.
When a regime’s actions fuel international drug networks, destabilise regions, impoverish millions, and violate fundamental human dignity, the issue is no longer “internal affairs”. It becomes a global security and humanitarian concern.
To insist that such leaders must never face consequences because of sovereignty is to argue—quietly but clearly—that power should never be restrained. That argument has never aged well in history.
UNETHICAL ALLIANCES AND MORAL HYPOCRISY
We are witnessing a disturbing pattern in global politics:
States that speak loudly about “non-interference” while quietly enabling
narco-crime, repression, fraudulent elections, religious persecution, and mass suffering.
China speaks.
Russia speaks.
Radical Islamist blocs speak.
But when consequences arrive—when NATO or the United States acts—they do not stand on the battlefield with their “friends”. They issue statements. They convene press conferences. They retreat to safety.
This is not solidarity.
This is opportunism.
Victimised nations must learn this hard truth:
Alliances without moral courage are illusions.
A RESPECTFUL BUT FIRM WORD TO MY PRESIDENT
(H.E. JOHN DRAMANI MAHAMA, GHANA)
With due respect, Mr President, discernment—not sentiment—must guide international diplomacy.
Passivity in the face of sustained Christian killings in Nigeria is not neutrality; it is a failure of moral leadership.
Selective sympathy—loud for some victims, silent for others—undermines credibility.
Foreign policy positions that redefine foundational moral realities at the UN without broad national consensus raise serious concern.
Condemning decisive action against globally harmful leadership while ignoring the victims of those regimes reflects misplaced priorities.
Ghana has historically spoken with moral weight, not ideological confusion. We must not drift into alliances that trade righteousness for relevance.
The most successful nations do not align with the loudest voices—
but with the most principled ones.
Defending Venezuelan “sovereignty” while ignoring repression, excusing violent actors who initiate conflict, remaining silent over religious slaughter, and condemning those who act against criminal leadership sends the wrong message—to history, to victims, and to the world.
Mr President, this is not statesmanship.
It is playing the good boy while injustice multiplies.
ON GLOBAL LEADERSHIP AND CONSEQUENCES
Leaders who hide behind sovereignty while exporting suffering—through drugs, terror, repression, or mass displacement—are not victims of global injustice. They are authors of it.
And those who defend them for political convenience should remember:
History is unforgiving
Victims have memories
Truth outlives propaganda
Today the language is “non-interference”.
Tomorrow it will be accountability.
A WARNING—AND AN INVITATION
This is not a call for chaos.
It is a call for moral clarity.
To leaders everywhere: Do not stand with criminals and expect to be remembered as statesmen.
Do not defend oppression and expect history’s applause.
Do not condemn nations that protect their citizens while excusing those who destroy theirs.
Sovereignty that kills innocence forfeits legitimacy.
Diplomacy without ethics is betrayal.
And alliances without righteousness always collapse.
Choose wisely. The world is watching.
Rev. Emmanuel Boachie
PRESIDENT, Centre for Biblical-Historical Christianity Defence
COUNTRY DIRECTOR, Awesome Bible College
HEAD PASTOR, Souls’ Pasture Church
+233 247 216 666
✉️ reveb2017@gmail.com

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