Ghana will host the Glasgow 2014 Queen's Baton Relay
this week, minister of youth and sports Elvis Afriyie-Ankrah said here
on Monday.
The Queen's Baton Relay is the traditional curtain raiser to the
Commonwealth Games and has been an inclusion in the Games program since
the Cardiff 1958 Commonwealth Games in Wales.
Briefing the media on the program lined-up for the event,
Afriyie-Ankrah expressed delight that the Queen's Baton Relay brought
the country an opportunity to highlight and promote the city and
athletes via the accompanying local and international media attention.
He said his outfit had already kick-started planning to celebrate the
arrival of the Glasgow 2014 Queen's Baton Relay which will travel
through places of interest in Accra and Ho.
The baton would be officially received by Ghana's Vice President
Kwesi Amissah-Arthur at a welcoming ceremony at the Flagstaff House on
Saturday, January 4, 2014.
"At the end of the relay in Ghana, it will have been carried by the
Vice President of the Republic, the Speaker of Parliament, the Chief
Justice, the Chief of Staff, 9 Ministers of State, 10 High
Commissioners, 4 Paramount Chiefs, 30 CEO's, 20 Top Sports
Personalities, 70 current and former athletes and 200 children," said
Afriyie-Ankrah.
He therefore called for massive public support as the Baton Relay
tours 2 regions and traverses 78 towns and villages across the country.
The baton will arrive in the Ghanaian capital Accra on January 3,
2014 from Sierra Leone, the 22nd country of its 71 Commonwealth
destinations.
The Glasgow 2014 Queen's Baton Relay began at Buckingham Palace on
October 9 this year..
The baton is currently travelling through Vanuatu in the Asia Pacific
and will then complete the final part of the journey in Scotland where
it will spend a total of 40 days.
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