Wednesday, March 12, 2014

MP For Tempane Sponsors 20 Disadvantaged Students




David Adakudugu, MP, Tempane
The Member of Parliament (MP) for Tempane, David Adakudugu, has provided twenty students in his constituency with a sponsorship package of ten thousand Ghana cedis (Gh¢10,000).


Development watchers and particularly the beneficiary families have welcomed this gesture as a momentous demonstration of commitment by the constituency’s first-ever legislator to salvage dipping educational standards and to eradicate poverty in the area. Traditional authorities in the constituency, too, have hailed the support, saying more of such intervention will keep many children where they ought to be― the classroom. 

Mr. Adakudugu, who was highly rated by observers as well as the media when he was the District Chief Executive (DCE) for Garu-Tempane from 2009 to 2012 and earned several accolades from the Upper East Regional Coordinating Council, has also provided three hundred mattresses to the Tempane Senior High School where some underprivileged students once perched on logs to stay the night. 

This follows his donation of one thousand one hundred books for teachers in the constituency, ten motorcycles for emergency cases in the area and seven television sets with satellites for some communities in the Garu-Tempane District where he (now as an MP) has also facilitated the construction of some classroom blocks just as he did when he was a DCE.   

“I am also presenting two hundred and fifty solar lamps to assist deprived schools which do not have electricity to provide lights to enable students to learn in the night,” the MP announced at the eleventh annual Danjour Festival held at the Kpikpira Primary School at the weekend. 

“I have procured and distributed sixty student mattresses, sixty maternity beds and sixty benches to all CHPS compounds in the District (Garu-Tempane) and of which Kpikpira is a beneficiary,” added the MP who in 2013 was credited with linking up with the Ministry of Energy and Petroleum to pilot the use of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) with 1,500 gas cylinders and accessories for a start in communities across Garu-Tempane. 

The Rural LPG Programme was introduced by the Mahama Administration to cut down dependence on forests as a source of energy for domestic purposes. Five thousand more gas cylinders and accessories are expected to be distributed later to households in the area. 

The Danjour Festival is celebrated by Bimobas in the Garu-Tempane District in honour of their ancestors for success stories chalked up in every immediate-past year. The festival also affords natives of the district, home and abroad, a common platform to identify developmental challenges confronting the area and to chart a workable way forward. 

The Chief of Kpikpira, Dana Dazuur II, expressed concerns about moral decay particularly among adolescents in his chiefdom. He observed with displeasure that teenagers, for lack of self-control, had continued to contract sexually transmitted infections and die from it in the area. 

Whilst advising the youth to desist from practices that are inimical to their future, the chief also entreated all parents and school authorities to step up monitoring and counseling of young people at home and in school.

The DCE for Garu-Tempane, Albert Akoka, bemoaned the spate of road crash in the district. He called on all stakeholders to intensify road safety education in the area to curb the canker.

By Edward Adeti

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