Prof. Amin Alhassan |
“The people of the Savannah Regions are not poor
because they are lazy or unintelligent enough to compete in life; they are poor
because of geographic and historical circumstance. ….However, when you mobilize
a peoples’ aspirations to be developed, their yearning to escape poverty, and
institutionalize the answer to these aspirations into an organization called
SADA, stakeholders of SADA’s mandate are bound to expect so much from it. And
realistically, most of the expectations from SADA will be exaggerated. I mean
we may be asking SADA to deliver what it cannot. But that is also because the
yearning to escape poverty is overwhelming.”
The
aforementioned were the opening statements of Professor Amin Alhassan, Dean of the
Faculty of Agribusiness and Communication Sciences of the University for
Development Studies [UDS], Nyankpala campus when he was invited by CLIP to
address a two-day conference on the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority
[SADA] recently held in Tamale.
According to
Prof. Amin, SADA might have to develop a thick skin to take in pressures from
the very people on whose behalf it was created, adding that, at the end of the
day, SADAs’ record would be evaluated by the people and not government.
He maintained
that, engaging with Civil Society Organizations [CSOs] was therefore not a
matter of choice for SADA, but a strategically necessary practice. “We should
be able to critique the work of SADA when necessary, praise the work of SADA
when due or even mobilize to ask for a review of SADA’s mandate. In any of
these options, CSOs are key” he pointed out.
He also argued
that, it would be wrong for anyone to conclude that the North was poor because
of its weakened vegetative cover, stressing that, increase in agricultural
produce in a globalized economy such as Ghana’s does not translate to increase
income for farmers and agricultural workers. “We know in Agribusiness that a
bumper harvest can actually result in impoverishment of farmers. So let us
widen the discussion beyond just agricultural productivity to general
conditions that can facilitate an economic takeoff of the North”, he advised.
Prof. Amin also
opined that, as an ecologically defined area,
Northern Ghana could celebrate its achievements in transport and communication,
and probably reserved the best of the celebrations for the next few years when
the promise of a Eastern corridor highway from the South to the North, and the
reconstruction of the Tamale airport into an international airport would have
been delivered.
He observed that, the road network linking the three most
important cities of the North namely; Tamale, Bolgatanga and Wa were currently
being reconstructed. “Clearly anyone who has recently done the triangular trip
of Tamale-Wa-Bolgatanga-Tamale cannot fail to notice what the near future holds
for the North. It is what the North is set to become and not what it is today
that is most heartwarming when we look at Transport and Communication. An
improved transportation infrastructure is a fundamental requirement of an
economic-take”, he posited.
Making
comparative analyses of the educational sector as well as poverty levels between
the North and South of the country, Prof. Amin revealed the following statistics:
Average household
size in the three regions of the North was about 5.8 persons per household
whereas the national average was 4.4 persons; percentage of population living
in rural areas in Upper West was 84%, Upper East 79% and 70% for Northern
Region whereas the national average was 49%; and the national average of people
with no access to toilet facility was 19% but in the North it was 72% or above.
Turning
his attention to education, he said the literacy rate among people 15 years and
above was national 72%; Upper West 40%; Upper East 41%; and Northern 33%.
Junior High School and Senior High School education completion rate: national
JHS 31% and SHS 22% whereas three regions of the North JHS 22% and SHS 9%.
Further
quoting statistics from IBIS, Prof. Amin said 48% of children of school going
age in Northern Ghana were out of school whereas only 10% of primary school
kids in Northern Ghana could read.
He observed
that, a very important indicator of quality education was the caliber of
teachers the North had, citing that, in Northern Ghana, the ratio of trained
teacher-student was 1:130 whereas in the South it was 1:36. “Clearly, these
gross disparities are not going to be solved by a process of business as usual.
Given our approach to the North-South disparities, I am comfortable at
describing the task and mandate given to SADA as mission impossible if it does
not engage with CSOs, governmental organizations, and traditional authorities,
beyond treating them as mere clientele.”
Prof. Amin also
urged SADA to play a policy advocacy role on behalf of the Savannah Regions and
described that ideology as policy fight. According to him, it was perfectly
possible for SADA to look at central government policy in agriculture, health,
education among others and see how the interest of the Savannah Regions was
served, and where it saw some serious problems, it could lobby and advocate for
policy adjustments.
He said for
instance, in 1990, Ghanaian chicken farmers controlled 80% of the domestic
market. And then by 2005, it dropped to 34%. But currently, he observed that, the
industry was now decimated with local farmers controlling about 10% of the
domestic trade saying “When our domestic poultry production accounted for 80%
of the Ghanaian market, the small-scale farmer could also count on the value of
his few birds to keep him out of poverty in the lean season”, Prof. Amin
reckoned.
According to
him, it was against this backdrop that several CSOs with ISODEC being a key
actor, lobbied government to include a 40% tariffs on imported chicken in the
2003 budget. “The budget was passed but the government refused to implement the
new import duties on poultry products because the IMF and World Bank would not
allow. The Civil Society initiative failed partly because there was no one at
the governmental level to also do what I call the policy fight within
government”, he recalled.
Under the theme:
“Towards
the Successful implementation of SADA –The Role of CSOs” the conference
was intended to bring together various Civil Society Organisations,
Non-Governmental Organisations, Farmer Based Organisations, government
departments and agencies among others, to perhaps brainstorm and come out with
strategies that would help the management of SADA to effectively implement
their programmes.
The Savannah
Accelerated Development Authority [SADA] was established by an Act of
Parliament [Act 805, 2010] as an independent and autonomous statutory corporate
body to: provide a framework for the comprehensive and long-term development of
the Northern Savannah Ecological Zone and to provide for related matters.
SADA covers the
Upper East, Upper West and Northern Regions, and areas contiguous to these
regions as may be determined by the Authority. The contiguous areas are the
Northern parts of Volta and Brong-Ahafo Regions.
Since
its inception in 2010, there had been concerns raised by various sections of
the public in the operational area of SADA with respect to its activities and
the rate at which implementation was progressing. The general perception among
CSOs was that the rate of implementation of SADA programmes was slow. This is
hardly surprising, considering the huge expectations beneficiaries had of SADA
and the fact that many perceived SADA and its programmes as a panacea to the
development challenges of the Northern Savannah Ecological Zone.
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