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Where to buy Ghana property

Publication by the research team of the Global Property Guide.

Ghana Properties

Ghana is one of the most interesting countries in West Africa with its mud mosques and slave castles, its capital and vast agricultural regions. Its 24 million people belong to more than 100 ethnic groups, but the conflicts between them are relatively low. hotel

Ghana is one of Africa's most successful countries and one of the continent's highest per capita GDPs. It is ready for further economic growth as oil reserves have recently been discovered in its offshore territory. Nevertheless, over a quarter of Ghanaians are still living under the poverty line. Agriculture is the main industry in the country, with precious metals and minerals being mined in close proximity.

Ghana is sub-Saharan, a few degrees north of the equator. The prime meridian is reduced to a part of the Eastern Hemisphere, which is part of the Western Hemisphere. The country is warm all year round, especially in March and April. The weather in May breaks and the rain falls until June. August is a particularly cool month and from September to October the rain falls heavily. In the south and southwest it is particularly rainy.

The land, now known as Ghana, was a source of precious minerals and workforce for its European colonizers. It was called the Gold Coast by the British. The Portuguese built on the territory the first European fort and called it Elmina (The Mine). For some time, the big seaside fortresses and castles like Elmina have been the ultimate stopping point for countless men, women and children captured and taken as slaves into America. Today, in the dark silence of their dungeons and dungeons these places – some designated as UNESCO World Heritage Sites – bear traumatic echoes of the past. A large percentage of tourists came to Ghana to experience the scourge their ancestors suffered while they passed through the "doors of no return" and took boats from their homeland, families and eternal freedom.

Following its independence from Britain in 1957, the Gold Coast became officially the Republic of Ghana. It was named after an ancient empire that spread across much of Africa.

The long Atlantic coastline of Ghana is protected by protected wetlands and glorious beaches that lead to forestlands, vast savannas and hilly regions as one goes north. In the southwestern part of the protected rainforest, lions, leopards and elephants still travel in the wild. Ghana's fields and forests are endangered by overcrowding, slashing and burning agriculture and overgrazing. It is not a paradise. Industrial mining pollution damaged the soil. Intertribal violence has cost thousands of lives in the Northern region over the years.

However, Ghana is a relatively thriving and well managed African nation. It is now regarded as one of Africa's best locations for business and investment. It has a good education system, and English remains the official language of Ghana, but more than 250 languages and dialects are spoken across the country. With a few exceptions, unlike many other African nations, the different groups who make up the Ghanaian people live in harmony. Although the name Ghana means "warrior king," in fact the country is quite peaceful.

The administrative regions of Ghana are divided into 10. There are many modern homes available for rent in the cities, particularly in Accra, the capital.

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