Ghanaian students studying in the United Kingdom under state scholarships have announced a July 30 protest over delays in the payment of tuition fees and living stipends.
The planned action will bring together undergraduate, master’s and doctoral students sponsored through the Ghana Scholarship Authority. Organisers say repeated attempts to resolve the payment problems have not produced the expected disbursements.
Prince Komla Bansah, president of the Ghanaian doctoral scholarship cohort in the United Kingdom, said the affected groups intended to take their concerns to major institutions in London.
The announced route includes 10 Downing Street, the British Broadcasting Corporation’s central office and Parliament. The students say the demonstrations are intended to draw attention to the effect of unpaid scholarship commitments on their studies and immigration status.
Tuition-fee arrears may prevent universities from completing administrative processes for sponsored students. The group says some candidates face the possibility of being withdrawn from their institutions, while those whose legal stay is linked to study could encounter immigration problems if their academic status changes.
Delayed living stipends have also affected students’ ability to meet routine costs while remaining enrolled. The concerns cover different scholarship cohorts and academic levels rather than a single university or programme.
Mr Bansah said more than 20 Ghanaian students who had completed programmes at the University of Nottingham had not received their certificates because the Ghana Scholarship Authority had not settled outstanding fees.
That figure is an account from the students’ representative. The University of Nottingham and the Scholarship Authority had not publicly issued separate figures in the material announcing the protest.
The graduates’ situation has become one of the central issues behind the planned action. Without their certificates, students who have completed their academic work may be unable to provide final documentation to employers, professional bodies or institutions considering them for further study.
Mr Bansah also alleged that the administration of the scholarship programme had caused financial loss to the state and called for an investigation into the authority. The allegation is the position of the students’ representative and has not been established by an official inquiry.
The protest announcement did not disclose the total number of affected scholarship recipients, the aggregate value of unpaid tuition or stipends, or a schedule of the arrears by institution. It also did not announce a new payment date from the authority.

The Ghana Scholarship Authority administers government scholarship support for eligible students in Ghana and abroad. For overseas awards, payments may include obligations to educational institutions and periodic support intended to meet approved living costs.
The students’ complaint concerns the timing of those obligations after they began or completed their programmes. Their representative said efforts to engage the authority over several months had not resulted in a settlement acceptable to the affected cohorts.
The July 30 date gives the authority and other government officials a period to respond before the students assemble. No cancellation or postponement had been announced following the declaration.
The planned demonstrations in London will be conducted outside Ghana, but the financial obligations at issue arise from Ghana’s scholarship programme. The organisers are therefore directing their complaint primarily at Ghanaian authorities while using British public institutions to amplify it.
No official response from the Scholarship Authority was included with the protest announcement. The latest stated position is that the combined student groups intend to proceed on July 30 and will include the unpaid-fee and withheld-certificate cases in their public presentation.













