Bonsu is a native of Offinso, a town in the Ashanti Region of Ghana.[3][4] He had his Ordinary Level education at the Tamale Secondary School, between 1974 and 1979.[5][6] Lack of water was one of the challenges he experienced on campus.[3] It was there that his dream of becoming a football administrator begun.[3] In 1981, Bonsu then moved to the Drayton School in London, England where he acquired his Advanced Level Certificate. Between 1985 and 1990, when Bonsu joined giant sports kit manufacturers, Adidas, he enrolled into their football Business Unit at Herzogenaurach, Germany, and in the process obtained a Diploma in Sports Business and Marketing.[7]
Career
Early career
After completing his training in sports Business and marketing, Bonsu worked with Adidas and became their first representative in West Africa and served as an Assistant Marketing Officer. He rose to become the kit maker's manager in Ghana and the whole of West Africa.[8] Within which period he brokered deals between the company and the Ghana football Association specifically the Ghana football national team.[7][8]
Family
Bonsu has nine biological siblings. They shared a home in Offinso, a town in Ghana's Ashanti region, but as they grew older, their lives started to diverge.[3] His mother was a respected Offinso Queen Mother who was wed to a rigid military officer.[3]
Football administration
"You were the key advocate on the board when the monumental decision to rebrand GOIL was taken – the results of which have seen GOIL being propelled to the number one position (retail) among oil marketing companies in Ghana”.
– Citation of Honour by managing director of GOIL, Mr. Patrick A.K. Akorli, 19 October 2015.[9]
He is a former director of Tamale-based club Real Tamale United.[10] Bonsu was also an executive member of Asante Kotoko.[11][12] In 2003 he launched his bid to be the Ghana Football Association's President.[11][13] He went against former president of the GFA Kwesi Nyantakyi, politician and executive member of Accra Hearts of Oak, Vincent Odotei Sowah, a former FA vice-chairman, Joseph Ade Coker and former executive council chairman, Y.A Ibrahim.[14] He subsequently lost to Kwesi Nyantakyi in the elections in December 2005.[15][16]
In January 2010, Bonsu was appointed board chairman of the National Sports Authority then a council under the Ministry of Youth and Sports.[17][18] Bonsu is known to have spearheaded the re-branding of the sports council until it subsequently became a sports authority.[18][19]
Managing Director of Goil
Bonsu served as a board member for Ghana Oil Company (GOIL) from July 2009 to April 2015. He also became acting managing director of the company after their long serving managing director Yaw Agyemang-Duah retired after serving with the company for 16 years.[20]
He served as managing director role from July 2011 to February 2012. In October 2015, He was acknowledged and honoured by the company for playing a key role in the company's rebranding process.[21][22]
Mayor of Kumasi
In 2013, President, John Dramani Mahama nominated Bonsu for the position of Metropolitan Chief Executive for the Kumasi Metropolitan Assembly.[23][24] In July 2016, he vacated his office and resigned after the Kumasi Traditional Council called him to order for his decision to take Nana Agyenim Boateng the Amoamanhene off the Kejetia project board without giving a notice to Otumfuo Nana Osei Tutu II, the Asantehene.[25]
He is the founder and former publisher of Agoo Magazine an African lifestyle magazine that was founded in 2001.[26][27][28]
Political career
Ahead of the 2020 elections, in September 2018 towards the National Democratic Congress' Presidential primaries he declared his intention to contest as Party's president flagbearership role.[8] In December 2018, he announced his decision to drop out of the race for the role and threw his support to whoever would emerge winner at the end of the primaries.[29]
Again, ahead of the 2024 elections, Kojo Bonsu expressed confidence in his ability to lead the National Democratic Congress (NDC) into the general election of 2024 by winning the party's presidential primary.[30] After delegates voted in the primaries on 13th May, 2023,[31]Mahama received 98.9% of the vote, while Kojo Bonsu, received 1.1%, making Mahama the clear winner.[32]
Personal life
He is an avid supporter of Ghanaian-based club Asante Kotoko.[33][34] He is fluent in French.[3]
Kojo Bonsu is divorced after 30 years of marriage.[35]