By Peter Quao Adattor

Election seasons, whether in politics, sports, or social groups, are often laced with division, suspicion, and conflict. But in no arena is this more apparent, and more dangerous, than in Ghanaian boxing. What was once a proud institution that put Ghana on the global sports map now teeters on the edge of chaos.
Having followed the sport since the era of the great Azumah Nelson, not as an administrator, but as a committed fan and later journalist, I have witnessed firsthand the highs and lows, the brilliance in the ring, and the brawls outside it. And today, I am deeply alarmed.
We are at a breaking point. If a bold and impartial intervention does not come soon, Ghana boxing may slide into irreversible disrepair.
A Legacy Worth Defending
Despite meagre support and neglect, boxing remains Ghana’s most successful sport on the global stage. From the glory days of Azumah Nelson, Ike Quartey, and Joshua Clottey, among others, to the recent historic clean sweep by the Black Rockets at the 2025 African Youth Championships in Gambia, boxing has brought more honour to this country than any other discipline.
This sport has done so without the state pampering often showered on football. No PR blitz, no stadium spectacles. Just sweat, pain, and dedication.
Boxing is also a crucial employment pipeline. It feeds families. not only boxers, but trainers, promoters, matchmakers, referees, judges, and gym staff. When nurtured, boxing reduces unemployment and crime. When divided, it implodes.

A House Divided
The Ghana Boxing Authority (GBA) is currently split right down the middle. On one side is the board, led by President Abraham Kotei Neequaye. On the other hand, a growing chorus of disillusioned stakeholders, trainers, promoters, and gym owners is accusing the board of mismanagement, constitutional violations, and arrogance.
The trust deficit is palpable. A congress and elections were scheduled for July 2025, but the road to that event is riddled with tension, finger-pointing, and boycotts. Meetings are being skipped, insults traded on platforms meant to unify, and constitutional documents mysteriously appearing and disappearing.
The GBA president has reportedly claimed there is no constitution, only to later produce one, alongside another known as the ‘green book’, when challenged. He’s accused prominent stakeholders of not being in ‘good standing,’ a charge they refute, arguing instead that transparency and accountability have been thrown out the window.
The Constitution is Clear
The GBA constitution is not a myth. Article 3, Clause 1 outlines its membership as the associations of trainers, promoters, managers, matchmakers, ring officials, veterans, gyms, and boxers, among others. These groups are the Authority. Without them, the GBA does not exist.
Article 4 spells out governance: Congress is the highest decision-making body, made up of delegates from all stakeholder associations. Article 5 states clearly that only members in good standing, those up to date on dues and in compliance with Authority rulings, can vote or participate meaningfully.
In essence, no single board or president can claim absolute power. The GBA is a collective institution governed by its own rules. When those rules are manipulated or ignored, chaos ensues.
Time for Intervention
What is happening today is unsustainable. Elections can’t be held amid such deep distrust. Ghana boxing cannot afford another collapse, not when young talents are finally making international waves. Not when the sport is a lifeline for thousands.
The Ministry of Sports and Recreation and the National Sports Authority must intervene immediately. Not later. Now. And not with platitudes or vague mediation. They must insist that the GBA returns to constitutional order. If any party, be it the board or the stakeholders, is found in breach, let the law take its course.
This isn’t about egos. It’s about the soul of a sport that once made us proud and still can.
A Final Bell Before the Fall
Boxing taught us that no matter how many punches you take, you keep your guard up. You keep swinging for what’s right.
To the stakeholders: you are the backbone of this sport. Do not let internal squabbles ruin your unity.
To the board: leadership is not despotism. Transparency is not optional.
To the Ministry and NSA: this is your moment to act. You were not given the authority to sit idly as the walls crumble.
The law is the law. Let it speak louder than any grudge.
God bless Ghana. And may her gloves stay raised.
By Peter Quao Adattor