Difference between revisions of "Ghana"

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* In late 2023, high ranking officers of the Ghana National Fire Service began appearing publicly in a new [[digital patterns|pixelated]] camouflage design, having a similar colorway to their previous analog pattern. This design incorporates black and red pixelated shapes on a sand-colored background, but appears to have lost the khaki elements of the original pattern.
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Latest revision as of 10:15, 20 April 2024

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Republic of Ghana

The Republic of Ghana is a small nation on the coast of West Africa, once home to a number of Akan-speaking tribal kingdoms, the most well-known of which was the Ashanti Empire (1670 to 1902). Europeans first made contact with the indigenous people of Ghana in the 15th century, when the Portuguese came there seeking to trade for gold, ivory and slaves. They would be joined in the mid-16th century by the Dutch, and by English, Danish and Swedish traders by the mid-17th century. The name Gold Coast was imposed on the region by the British, who made it a protectorate in 1874 after the last of the Dutch withdrew from their trading forts. Britain clashed with the Ashanti over the course of three wars, finally ending with the Third Ashanti-British War (1900-1901), which firmly established British colonial rule. Following the First World War, the region formerly known as German Togoland was divided by the League of Nations and placed under protection of England and France. British Togoland would ultimately merge with Gold Coast in 1956, and in March of 1957 gain full independence as the new Republic of Ghana. French Togoland would later become the modern Republic of Togo.

The Ghana Armed Forces consist of the Army, Air Force, Navy, National Police Service, Palace Guard (Presidential Guard), and the Civil Defence, and is considered one of the most professional military forces in Africa today. Ghana has enjoyed stable relations with its neighbors in West Africa, and is committted to a number of peacekeeping efforts with the United Nations, including missions to the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC), Liberia (UNMIL), Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL), and Lebanon (UNIFIL).

Camouflage Patterns of Ghana

  • Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, the vast majority of photographs of Ghana military personnel illustrate the use of a plain, olive green combat and everyday working uniform. Yet as far back as 1979, elements of the Ghana Army had adopted a copy of the British DPM camouflage. It seems likely the use of this camouflage was restricted to specialized units like the President's Own Guard Regiment (POGR). Use of DPM would also be extended to some Air Force units, in the late 1980s or early 1990s.

Ghana4.jpg

  • Beginning in the late 1990s, some Ghanian military personnel began deploying in m81 woodland pattern BDUs donated by the USA.

Usa7.jpg Ghana1.jpg

  • Another woodland variant imported from Asia is seen here. This design would ultimately become the standard issue camouflage uniform of the Army.

Ghana2.jpg

  • Prior to the present era, some members of the Ghana Police Service have worn a tiger stripe camouflage design with a blue colorway. This is similar to some commercially issued patterns, and may in fact be produced from the same drawings.

Ghanapolice.jpg

  • Since 2007 or thereabouts, the Ghana Immigration Service's Border Protection Unit has worn a "leopared print" camouflage design with a mostly green colorway, seen here. The pattern reminds us of a similar one developed in the 1970s for other African nations, such as Zaire and Chad.

Ghanaimmigration.jpg

  • Members of the Ghana Police Service deployed with the African Union (AU/UA) forces in 2012 were observed wearing a pixelated pattern with a blue/purple colorway, and have since been documented wearing the pattern in general service. This pattern is in fact a copy of the KA2 pixelated design developed for the Jordanian Police, and appears to replicate the details of that pattern, down to the miniature outline of the Jordan embedded into the design itself! By 2020, a darker camouflage design began appearing in use with the Ghana Police Service, with an almost violet tone to it.

Ghana3.jpg Ghanapolice2.jpg

  • The Ghana National Fire Service also has its own camouflage design, being a variation of the standard woodland scheme with an orange/black colorway.

Ghanafire.jpg

  • Another non-military entity that wears camouflage is the Ghana Prison Service. Photographs as old as 2010 show some Prison Service personnel wearing a copy of the US six-color chocolate chip camouflage pattern. More recently, however, two other patterns have been worn by this agency, a "desert lizard" design (similar to that worn by Mauritania and a "desert woodland" pattern.

China25.jpg Ghanaprison1.jpg Ghanaprison2.jpg

  • Certain units of the Ghana Army have been issued a copy of the US Marine Corps MARPAT temperate camouflage design, dating as far back as 2017. Use of this design appears to have only been retained by the Army Special Operations Brigade, which continues to field the pattern for its personnel. However, past military participants in Operation Vanguard (a joint Army-Police effort against illegal mining) were also documented wearing the pattern.

Ghana-marpat.jpg

  • The Customs Division of the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) has issued two types of camouflage pattern uniforms in recent years, a blue-dominant woodland-derived design, and - more recently (since at least 2020) - a blue-purple dominant DPM camouflage pattern.

Ghana-customs1.jpg

  • Members of the Ghana National Ambulance Service (NAS) wear an interesting camouflage design wearing a brightly-toned, green-dominant camouflage design, drawing heavily from leaf pattern designs.

Ghana-nas.jpg

  • In late 2023, high ranking officers of the Ghana National Fire Service began appearing publicly in a new pixelated camouflage design, having a similar colorway to their previous analog pattern. This design incorporates black and red pixelated shapes on a sand-colored background, but appears to have lost the khaki elements of the original pattern.

Ghana-nfs2.jpg