Theophilus Dokurugu |
The Convener of the
Civil Society Platform on the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority (SADA)
Theophilus Ibrahim Dokurugu, is urging the Authority to have a “Marshall Plan” that
all stakeholders in the Northern Savannah Ecological Zone can buy into and
actively support.
According
to him, having such a plan does not suggest in any way, that the current SADA
strategy is flawed. “It is brilliant; but could do more with fine tuning and
additions in some respects. In doing so, we may, for example, need to ask the
critical question – what are the five most critical development challenges of
the SADA operational area?”, he observed.
In
an exclusive interview with Savannahnews, Mr. Dokurugu
said: “When this is answered, we can then prioritize them on regional basis
since emphasis may vary from region to region. SADA can then relook its current
strategy and see where it fits into the felt needs of the people it serves.
Only then can it play its role of facilitating strategic planning, leveraging
of needed resources, strategic partnerships and investments and coordination of
relevant programmes effectively, in tandem with the local government system”,
he explained.
Like
a toddling baby, SADA, he said, may have taken a heavy fall in its first
attempt at walking and gotten bruised. “Common sense let us know that a parent
who would not want to see his or her child fall or get hurt in learning to walk
ends up creating an able bodied cripple. What SADA like any child needs in
spite of the challenges confronting it, is support, guidance and encouragement,”
he adviced.
Mr.
Dokurugu observed that, what SADA needs at this point in time and which all
stakeholders need to lend a helping hand, is a time for reflection and
introspection and charting a course that is guided by appropriate systems and
structures that must be allowed to function.
Recent events may seem to suggest SADA has had a false
start. For instance, the recent directive by His Excellency President John Mahama instructing the Board of SADA, to act in
consultation with the Attorney General to terminate two contracts it entered
into with Asongtaba Cottage Industries seem to give credence to this assertion.
However, going forward, like an experienced sprinter
cited for a foul, SADA according to Mr. Dokurugu, needs to come off the blocks
getting the basics right and powering to the finish line as a winner, warning
“Anything short of this means an exit from the competition.” “This is
achievable over the next sixteen years or so; so let us all get involve and
play our part in ways that make Mother Ghana the ultimate winner”, he added.
He also recommended that, the public is well
sensitized and informed about what SADA is as an organization, what its mandate
is, its modus operandi and how the public can relate to it. “It should be made
crystal clear to all and sundry from now on, that SADA is not a replacement for
development programmes that government would normally undertake in its operational
area; rather it is an adjunct of strategic investments and programmes that
would accelerate the pace of development of the area to bring it to levels akin
to the Southern parts of the country.”
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