Ghana’s government plans to bestow a presidential honour on Christina Hammock Koch, the only woman aboard NASA’s Artemis II mission, cementing a direct link between the West African nation and humanity’s farthest crewed voyage in more than half a century.
Koch studied at the University of Ghana and has long celebrated her ties to the country. That connection has now placed Ghana squarely in the global spotlight after the Artemis II crew completed a lunar flyby, travelling deeper into space than any humans since the Apollo era. Foreign Affairs Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa revealed that Ghana has already opened diplomatic channels to arrange a ceremony at which President John Dramani Mahama will recognise Koch on behalf of all Ghanaians.

The Artemis II mission lifted off from Kennedy Space Center in Florida atop NASA’s Space Launch System rocket, carrying four astronauts inside the Orion spacecraft. Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Koch, and Canadian Space Agency Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen tested critical spacecraft systems, life-support operations, and crew performance during the deep-space flight. After looping around the Moon, the crew re-entered Earth’s atmosphere and touched down safely, closing out a landmark chapter in NASA’s broader plan to return humans to the lunar surface and eventually push toward Mars.
Ablakwa hailed the mission as “scientifically groundbreaking and exceedingly inspiring,” adding that the safe return of the crew demonstrated “the boundless potential of human ingenuity and courage.” He stressed that Koch’s accomplishment carries weight far beyond personal achievement, serving as proof of the global reach of Ghanaian-linked talent in science and technology. “I can confirm that the Government of Ghana has conveyed through diplomatic channels its intention at a mutually agreed time for President Mahama to, on behalf of the people of Ghana, honour the only female astronaut, Christina Hammock Koch, who studied at the University of Ghana and proudly celebrates her association with Ghana,” his statement read.

The planned honour positions Ghana among a small group of nations publicly claiming a stake in the Artemis programme’s success. For a country investing heavily in its own space ambitions — including the Ghana Space Science and Technology Institute — aligning with a high-profile astronaut who walked its university corridors sends a potent signal about what homegrown education can seed on the world stage. It also amplifies calls across Africa for greater representation in space exploration, a domain still dominated by a handful of wealthy nations.

No date has been set for the ceremony, but Ablakwa indicated both governments are working to agree on timing. When Koch does arrive in Accra, she will carry with her not just mission patches and flight data, but a compelling reminder that the road to the Moon can run through Legon.
Source: MyJoyOnline
