Why government is renaming Kotoka Airport to Accra International Airport
Parliament is set to debate a bill seeking to rename Kotoka International Airport as Accra International Airport, a move the government says is meant to recognise residents whose lands were taken for the construction of the facility.
The Majority Leader, Mr Mahama Ayariga, explained that the proposed Airport Bill aims to restore the airport’s original name, arguing that the current name does not reflect the sacrifices made by the people of Accra.
Mr Ayariga said the Minister for Transport will present the bill to seek parliamentary approval for the proposed change.
Speaking to journalists during a parliamentary leadership media briefing on February 3, 2026, Mr Ayariga said it was unfair for the airport to carry a name that did not relate to the original landowners.
“It is not fair to the people of Accra. They gave their land for the airport, it was named after their city, and then it was changed to another name, even though the land did not come from there,” he said.
The airport was originally known as Accra International Airport when it opened in 1958. In 1969, the name was changed to Kotoka International Airport in honour of Lieutenant General Emmanuel Kwasi Kotoka, a member of the National Liberation Council who was killed during an abortive coup attempt on April 17, 1967.
Mr Ayariga said the proposed change would address what he described as a historical wrong. “We are going back to using Accra as the name of the airport in recognition of the people who gave up their land,” he said.
He stressed that the proposal was not meant to question or erase the legacy of Lieutenant General Kotoka.
“This has nothing to do with his personality. I do not see a reason why an airport should not be named after him. The point is that when you remove a name that reflected where the land came from and replace it with another, it creates a cycle where names can be changed again in the future,” he explained.
Mr Ayariga added that the intention was to recognise the people of Accra who sacrificed their lands for the development of the capital city.
The Minister of Transport is expected to lay the Bill before Parliament during the current eight-week session.
Kotoka International Airport handled a record 3.1 million passengers in 2023 and remains the country’s only international airport.
The naming of the airport has long been a subject of public debate, with some critics arguing that a facility developed during the era of Dr Kwame Nkrumah should not bear the name of a figure associated with the 1966 coup.
