National-Sanitation-day-accra-records-high-turnout-as-other-regions
Scores of traders within the Central
Business District (CBD) of Accra last Saturday abandoned their trading
activities in the early hours of the morning to participate in the monthly
National Sanitation Day (NSD) exercise, reports Zainabu Issah.
The exercise, which preceded the
celebration of the 59th Independence Day the following morning, saw a number of
the traders clearing choked drains and collecting debris left behind after
a rainfall.
The traders swept and collected
rubbish in the various markets.
The Chief Executive Officer of
the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA), Dr Alfred Okoe Vanderpuije, led the
exercise and was supported by Zoomlion Ghana Limited, a waste management
company.
He toured some principal streets,
other markets and various suburbs in the municipality to ensure that they were
cleared of filth.
Students of Accra Academy, as part
of their 85th Speech and Prize-giving Day celebration, undertook a massive
clean-up of the school.
The students weeded and swept their
school compound and the surroundings, with support from workers of Zoomlion
Ghana Limited who fumigated the compound against vectors.
Successful exercise
Describing the exercise as a
successful one, Dr Vanderpuije said it was important for the public to accept
the national exercise as a collective responsibility.
He noted that the monthly NSD
exercise, which is a government intervention, was gradually paying off.
“We are committed to working more;
we are going to make sure that we keep the fire burning so that we get more
people involved so in the future, we are committed to creating a more conducive
environment for everybody,” Dr Vanderpuije said.
The headmaster of Accra Academy, Mr
Samuel Ofori-Adjei, suggested to the various senior high schools (SHS) to teach
their students how to segregate their waste, so that they could take it up as a
waste-management venture later in life.
The Communications Manager of
Zoomlion Ghana Limited, Mr Robert Tetteh Coleman, said the company was
committed to ensuring a clean and safe environment at all times.
Low patronage
From Tongo in the Upper East Region,
Alhandu Abdul-Hamid reports that the NSD exercise received low patronage. When
the Daily Graphic reached Tongo in the Talensi District at 6 30a.m., almost all
those gathered in the Central Business area, where the exercise was to begin,
were workers of Zoomlion.
When the exercise eventually took
off at 7.50a.m., the participants were divided into two groups. One group
cleaned from the market area to the premises of the district assembly, while
the others cleaned the area around the Tongo Health Centre and the football
park.
Some residents who did not take part
in the exercise said they were not aware of it, while others said the clean-up
exercise was the responsibility of Zoomlion workers who were paid to do that.
The District Supervisor of Zoomlion,
Mr John Yin Boare, blamed the low patronage on the inability of the district
assembly to enact and implement by-laws that would make it compulsory and also
put in place sanctions deterrent to those who failed to participate in the NSD.
Cape Coast
Some residents of Cape Coast joined
in the National Sanitation Exercise with enthusiasm on Saturday but turnout was
generally low, reports Shirley Asiedu-Addo.
Many residents stayed indoors and
waited for the exercise to be completed before going out to conduct their
business activities.
During the exercise, which was held
in various suburbs of the metropolis, gutters were cleared of filth.
The Central Regional Minister, Mr
Kweku Rickettes Hagan, some government officials and some personnel of the
Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS) joined residents in parts of the metropolis
for the exercise.
Later, Mr Ricketts-Hagan advised
those who participated in the exercise to help create awareness of the exercise
and encourage others to join in subsequent ones.
Michael Quaye reports from Wa that
commercial drivers and shop owners joined other residents to undertake the
exercise.
The Deputy Regional Minister, Dr
Mohammed Musheibu Alfa, and the Chief Executive of the Wa Municipal Assembly,
Mr Nuhu Putiaha, led residents to clean drains and their surroundings in
various parts of the regional capital.
The GNFS, the police, military and
staff of Zoomlion also provided support for the exercise.
Brass band music played in the
background to create a relaxed atmosphere as well as provide fun for the
participants.
Apathy
Our reporter in Kumasi, Felix A.
Baidoo, said because of the apathy that characterised the clean-up exercise
undertaken around the Aboabo station and Allah Bar, at a point, military
personnel partaking in it, had to force some youth who were looking on to join
in.
For the first time, however,
more than 50 tricycles (Aboboyaa) were on hand to convey the refuse to standby
waste trucks to be carted away and this prevented rubbish pile-ups after the
exercise, as had been the case previously.
The Ashanti Regional Minister, Mr
John Alexander Ackon, said that for the National Sanitation Day exercise to be
beneficial to the nation, there was the need for Ghanaians to take the
initiative as their own and not an imposition from the government.
Mr Ackon announced that the
government would soon inaugurate a new compost plant at Adagya in the Bosomtwe
District to improve the sanitation situation in the region.
A number of celebrities, namely Tic
tac, Kekye, Rex Omar, Ben Brako, WIP, 55, Pascaline Edward, Gariba and Guru,
among others, took part in the clean-up exercise.
Emmanuel Adu-Gyamerah reports from
Suma-Ahenkro that the Minister of Local Government and Rural Development,
Alhaji Collins Dauda, joined the chiefs and people of the Suma Traditional Area
to undertake the exercise.
Tens of people from the town and
nearby villages took part in the exercise which was also organised as a prelude
to the 2016 Akwantu Kese Festival of the traditional area.
They swept streets and cleaned
gutters and later collected the piled-up refuse to the refuse dumps in the town.
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