D.O.O.R. Ignites Diaspora Summit 2025
A “Decade of Our Repatriation” Blackprint Lands in Accra as Ghana Drives the Wider Reparations Mandate
By Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon (Professor), RepatriateToGhana.com | Accra — December 2025

ACCRA — December 2025 — Diaspora Summit 2025 wasn’t just another high-level gathering—it felt like a hinge in history. Under the theme “Resetting Ghana – The Diaspora as the 17th Region,” the summit brought policymakers, global diaspora leaders, and major institutions into one room to press a united agenda: reparative justice, healing, and the practical re-linking of the global Black family to Ghana.
And inside that larger push, one message hit with special force: the Decade of Our Repatriation (DOOR) is not a slogan—it is an organized pathway for people ready to come home and build.
That message was delivered by Ɔbenfo (Professor) Ɔbádélé Bakari Kambon, founder of RepatriateToGhana.com, on Day Two—in a prime slot before the Vice President—as part of a focused conversation on how diaspora engagement can strengthen Ghana’s economy collectively.
As Ɔbenfo (Professor) Kambon put it, he was brought to the panel “to speak on an initiative that has been endorsed by the office of the president … called decade of our repatriation.” And then he defined it in a way no one in the room could forget: “picture the year of return times 10 … and then raise it to the power of 10.”
In other words: DOOR is a decade-long repatriation program (2026–2036) built for measurable return—relocation pathways, settlement, investment, community formation, and long-term nation-building through return. And one of the tangible anchors for that return is now landing in Accra: Blackprint Lands—a practical “where” for the “how” of coming home.
Heads of State, heads of institutions, top officials, and global voices

The Summit’s official programme underscored the level of leadership present—featuring key government and institutional figures including H.E. John Dramani Mahama (President), H.E. Jane Naana Opoku-Agyemang (Vice President), Hon. Julius Debrah (Chief of Staff), Hon. Kofi Okyere Darko (Director, Diaspora Affairs Office of the President), H.E. Wamkele Mene (Secretary-General, AfCFTA), Hon. Augustus Goosie Tanoh (Presidential Advisor, 24-Hour Economy), and Mr. Simon Madjie (CEO, GIPC)—alongside major policy presentations on the juridical basis of reparations.
Day One culminated in a flagship reparations conversation moderated by Dr. Ekow Spio-Garbrah with heavyweight panellists including Comrade Kwesi Pratt Jnr, Prof. Esi Sutherland-Addy, and Lawyer Benjamin Crump.
What made Day Two different is that it moved from “why” to “how”—from reparations discourse to diaspora integration as a development pillar: diaspora as an active partner in governance, investment, innovation, and cultural promotion.
That is precisely where RepatriateToGhana.com positioned DOOR and Blackprint Lands: not as commentary, but as implementation.

A single mandate—multiple coordinated lanes
What made Ɔbenfo (Professor) Kambon’s presentation resonate is that it did not position repatriation as a competing agenda to external reparations. Instead, it framed DOOR as the “do-now” lane inside the same mandate—the lane that turns a historic claim into immediate, structured movement.
He named the central obstacle bluntly: diaspora return often collapses under preventable losses because of fragmentation—people arriving alone, navigating systems alone, and paying the “tuition” of mistakes alone. In his words: “this fragmentation is the problem but the solution is coordination,” and that is the role DOOR is designed to play—“because it serves as an umbrella.”
Why 2026–2036 matters: DOOR aligns with the AU’s Decade of Reparations
The timing is not accidental.
The African Union has extended its reparations focus into a Decade of Reparations (2026–2036), and Ghana’s President John Dramani Mahama has been serving as the AU Champion for Reparations, calling for that decade to be a living mandate—not words left on paper.
In that same spirit of “mandate into motion,” Ghana’s government has also put machinery behind the diplomacy, including appointing Dr. Ekwow Spio-Garbrah as Special Envoy for Reparations, tasked to mobilize partnerships and help shape policy frameworks in Africa and across the diaspora.
DOOR’s contribution is to ensure the diaspora enters that decade with movement—not merely messaging.
And Ɔbenfo (Professor) Kambon made the philosophical posture unmistakable: “repatriation … is now self reparations. This is not asking anyone. This is that we have the power to do for ourselves.”

Mahama’s 2016 “birthright” moment—and why DOOR is the next chapter
DOOR’s argument landed even harder because it sits on a clear historical arc.
Nearly a decade ago—on December 28, 2016—a ceremony in Accra formalized citizenship for 34 members of the African-Caribbean diaspora, a moment widely framed as restoring what “rightfully belongs” to those returning home.
Ɔbenfo (Professor) Kambon anchored his DOOR message directly in that lived reality, explaining: “I say this as someone who received … citizenship and I know what it means when policy becomes real life.” That is the bridge DOOR seeks to build—policy into pathways; ideals into infrastructure.
Not “Dirty December”: permanence, respect, and building

One of the strongest moments in the presentation was Ɔbenfo (Professor) Kambon’s insistence that DOOR is not tourism and not seasonal sentiment.
He explained why “return” is often too vague to carry a nation-building mandate, and why “repatriation” changes the frame: “when you say repatriation, there’s an idea of permanence. There’s an idea of being accepted and respected when you come back.”
Then he delivered the line that drew a clear boundary around the DOOR project:
“This isn’t about dirty December. This isn’t just coming to party for a week or two. This is actually coming here and moving your wife, your children, your family, your savings right back to Ghana in order to build.”
That is where Blackprint Lands in Accra becomes critical: it’s the practical anchor that makes permanence realistic—land, location, and a structured ecosystem that helps people build instead of drift.
“DOOR is key”: the refrain that turned an idea into a mandate
Ɔbenfo (Professor) Kambon didn’t just present information—he made the room participate in the concept. He used a call-and-response to lock the message into the audience:
“when I say door, I want you to say is key,” and then drove home the thesis: “Door is key … Door is key to resetting Ghana.”
That refrain matters because DOOR is built to do what slogans do not: coordinate.
From abstraction to action: projects, partnerships, and safeguards
To show that DOOR is not aspirational rhetoric, Ɔbenfo (Professor) Kambon pointed to concrete initiatives and developments already underway under the DOOR umbrella—examples of return converting into enterprise and infrastructure.
He highlighted, among others, an eco resort and training facility “already operational in the volta region,” and a major agricultural operation: “a 46 acre moringa facility already here.” He also referenced broader multi-stakeholder development visions, emphasizing these are not isolated enclaves but projects designed to contribute to Ghana’s wider development trajectory.
Then, in Q&A, he addressed what many people fear most: land scams, housing traps, and informal middlemen. His answer focused on traceability and professionalization, noting enforcement tied to Ghana’s land reforms and the need for licensed practice: “you have to be a licensed and registered broker under REAC or an agent.”
He added a historic point that directly reassures diasporans seeking trustworthy pathways: “myself and my sister are the first historic diasporans to register legally as brokers here in Ghana.” And he captured the daily reality that this system is meant to correct: “every Uber driver hops up and says, ‘Oh, I have a plot of land for sale for you.’”
He also named institutional endorsements and partnerships that create vetted lanes for returnees—including Ghana Tourism Development Company, as well as partner organizations such as Triple A and the Ghana Caribbean Association—so that people enter Ghana through accountable networks rather than improvisation.

The DOOR call: enter the decade with targets, systems, and accountability
That’s where the DOOR presentation hit its mark.
Because if 2026–2036 is the AU Decade of Reparations, DOOR insists the diaspora should enter that decade with more than applause and panel notes. The pitch is straightforward: organize return as a mass, measurable project—a decade with targets, systems, pathways, and accountability.
And for the people ready to move from inspiration to implementation, Ɔbenfo (Professor) Kambon’s invitation was simple and direct: “go to … https://door.events and sign up for the free zoom informational session.”
He closed by returning the room to the refrain one last time: “Remember that the door is key. Door is key.”
Sign up (and start moving)
Decade of Our Repatriation (DOOR): https://decadeofourrepatriation.com
Repatriation pathways and services (RepatriateToGhana.com): https://repatriatetoghana.com
Info session registration: https://door.events


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