
Parliament has passed the Public Holidays and Commemorative Days (Amendment) Bill, 2025.
The object of the bill is to amend the Public Holidays and Commemorative Days Act, 2001 (Act 601) to provide for Shaqq Day and July 1 as statutory public holidays.
It also provides additional holiday, for the Muslim community as Shaqq Day, which would be observed a day after the Eid-ul Fitr celebration.
The bill also deletes August 4 as Founders’ Day and reinstates September 21 as Founder’s Day.
The bill, which was passed under a certificate of urgency, was presented to the House and read for the first time by the Minister of the Interior, Mohammed Mubarak Muntaka on June 24, 2025.
That was after the Committee on Defence and Interior and the leadership of the Committee on Constitutional and Legal Affairs considered it to be of urgent nature.
Justification for bill
Moving the motion to adopt the committee’s report, Mr Muntaka said the government had looked at the number of holidays and in line with some of the promises it made with regards to the holidays, had restructured the holidays to take away those that were controversial and those “we are unanimous and rallied around”.
He said the government would keep January 1 as New Year’s Day, January 7 as Constitutional Day, March 6 as Independence Day, March or April for Good Friday for Christians, March or April as Easter Monday for Christians, May 1 as Labour Day and July 1 as Republic Day.
He said the government believed that the July 1 commemorative day was a very significant day in the life of Ghana and “therefore we are bringing it back as a full holiday”.
“We believe that as a country we are united around July 1,” he said, telling the House that August 4 was being taken out as Founders’ Day.
“Because we believe that as a country we are not unanimous around it and it served as a divisive day for us as Ghanaians,” he said.
He said the first Friday in December will be celebrated as Farmers’ Day and December 25 as Christmas Day for Christians.
“Then we have December 26 as Boxing Day for our Christian brothers and sisters, as well as Eid-ul-Fitr, which is a lunar date that sometimes varies for our Muslim community.
“We are introducing the Shaqq Day, which is a day after Eid-ul-Fitr, as an additional day for our Muslim community, and Eid-ul-Adha, which is also lunar,” he said.
With holidays becoming 14 in all, the minister said the number was not excessive.