Mr. Abdallah Kassim |
Civil Society Organisations [CSOs] in Northern Ghana
have decried the lack of information and openness that currently exists within
the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority [SADA] Secretariat and want the
Board and Management of the Authority to create a channel that would allow
free-flow of information and communication to the public in order to make projects
implementation a success.
Information and
communication are the lifeblood of any serious organization and it was
imperative for SADA in the view of CSOs to embark on intensive awareness
creation and information sharing programmes on its financial, fiscal and
regulatory incentives and how people could benefit from or take advantage of
such incentives for the development of their business.
However, the
absence or ineffectiveness of the Public Relations Department of SADA to
promote a two-way communication between the Authority and stakeholders has led
to a lot of speculations in the media and the general public recently following
an expose made by a legislator of Ghana’s parliament regarding millions of
investments that had been made on some guinea fowl and afforestation projects.
Against this
background, the Northern Ghana Network for Development [NGND] has formed a CSO
Platform for Engagement With SADA, intended to constantly monitor the
implementation of the Authority’s strategic framework and suggest pertinent
changes in order to maintain its relevance and effectiveness in achieving the
expected outcomes.
Speaking at the
launch of the Coalition of CSOs Platform for Engagement With SADA in Tamale,
NGND’s Executive Committee Chairman Abdallah Kassim, said it would also keep
alight the quest to maintain the political will and sustain national awareness
of the need for fairness in closing the development gap between the North and
the South.
He suggested
that, SADA could provide information and education, or initiate communication
activities, that helped micro-entrepreneurs to re-align their enterprises and
prioritise them in ways that enabled them to move away from investing overly in
social ventures, to embracing economic investments.
Mr. Kassim
maintained that, there must be a two-way communication channel between SADA and
its stakeholders that ensures constant flow of information to its stakeholders
and to elicit information from them, which could be used to determine the
subsequent direction and levels of services provided by SADA.
For instance, worrying
reports from civil society indicates that if precautions are not taken, a
number of challenges that could derail the gains of SADA would soon emerge and
these include, replacement of government funds for normal development
activities with SADA funds; inadequate consultations with key stakeholders by
SADA; politicization of the programmes and activities of SADA; dependence of
SADA’s current funding regime on political will and non-functioning of some
structures of the Authority. If these perceptions are anything to go by, it means
that the management of SADA would have a lot of work to do regarding explaining
things better to the understanding of the public.
Alhaji G.S. Iddi, SADA CEO |
For more than
four decades now residents, in Northern Ghana, have moaned and groaned about
how they have been left behind; about how they have little resources; about the
“yawning development gap” between the North and the South and about how they
need donor intervention and equitable development.
Now the people
have SADA: a complete vehicle for speeding up development of the Northern
Ecological Zone and catching up with the South. SADA is an independent state
agency mandated by an Act 805 of 2010 to coordinate a comprehensive development
agenda for the Northern Savannah Ecological Zone. It is a positive venture that
intends rapid, concentrated investment in strategic areas of the economy of
Northern Ghana in a manner never seen before in the history of the country.
Ironically, SADA
has used up four years of its 20-year lifespan and it is yet to find its feet.
The Chief Executive Officer was employed in 2011 and some of its staff assumed
office just in the first quarter of 2013.
SADA hit the
ground running with a lucrative butternut business and other snapshot projects;
but just as this success was about to be
hailed, the organization inadvertently plunged into the controversial abyss of
tree planting scandal and guinea fowl rearing palaver.
SADA is riding
on the vision of a “Forested and Green North by 2030”. Its strategy entails a
major paradigm-shift in promoting economic growth and sustainable development.
It is ensuring that smallholder families and poor farmers develop a long-term
stake in agriculture through inter-cropping with economic trees. Revolving
around this forested North are complimentary investments in roads, energy and
water resources, education and health. It proffers short-term food and
livelihoods security measures that also address social protection and peace
issues.
Paradoxically,
up till now, majority of the people of the North do not know whether SADA is
living up to the strategies it is supposed to implement. The SADA Secretariat
is not forthcoming; information on its activities seems to be classified. Even
most urban based CSOs do not understand what SADA is all about or what it is
doing, how much more community based organizations, traditional authorities and
rural communities. Of late, SADA has become popular for the wrong reasons. The
lack of information about its operations opens it up to speculation and leaves
its stakeholders in the dark.
Thus, the
Executive Committee Chairman of NGND promised the Coalition of the CSO Platform
for Engagement With SADA with membership comprising of NGOs, CBOs, FBOs and
individuals especially those in the Northern Savannah Ecological Zone, would
positively influence the strategy, programmes, projects and activities of SADA
through evidence based advocacy.
No comments:
Post a Comment