President John Mahama |
An
Environmentalist with the Zasilari Ecological Farms Project (ZEFP) in the
Northern Region Issifu Sulemana Jobila, is urging government to immediately institute
robust measures to preempt any attempt by any individual or a syndicate to
fleece resources allocated to the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority
(SADA).
According to him, recent exposé by Investigative
Journalist Manasseh Azure Awuni breaks the heart of many northerners and
environmentalists like himself, considering the fact that a lot of those
appointed to manage resources and programmes of SADA are “our kith and kin who should
never have disappointed us or think of letting us down.”
The three regions of the north –Upper West, Upper East
and Northern, according to Mr. Jobila in an interview with Savannahnews, are the
most environmentally degraded and poverty stricken as compared to any part of Ghana.
“Every right thinking Ghanaian at this point of our nation’s history actually
believes that, this is the opportune time for northerners to be lifted up from protracted
poverty and all other negativities associated with environmental degradation.
“About 90 percent of the population in Upper West
Region is poor; in the Upper East the figure is 80 percent and in the Northern
Region, 70 percent. Presidents Mills and Mahama saw the vision to bring accelerated
development to us even in the face of unnecessary criticisms by some Ghanaians.
And I believe by now some of those early critics are saying they have been
vindicated”, he remarked.
Mr. Jobila cautioned that, failure by President John
Dramani Mahama to purge the current system created at SADA especially ways in
which contracts are being signed or partnerships are entered into by SADA and
private institutions, many northerners will never forget about the huge
mistakes that have already been committed since he is the appointing authority.
“People have been appointed and given set targets to
meet. What a lot of citizens of the SADA zone are hearing is that, some if not
all of them, are yet to meet a single target set for them. Yet they are
receiving salary at the end of every month. How then do you expect citizens to
believe that the nation is going through economic crisis when there is such
wanton dissipation of resources allocated to an infant organisation such as
SADA”, Mr. Jobila lamented.
He said his own checks on the afforestation project in
the West Mamprusi District shows that it was a complete failure. “Aside Asongtaba’s
failure to pay labourers they engaged, thus their refusal to cater for the
trees, land tenure system is another issue that wasn’t taken seriously. In one
of the beneficiary communities there was confusion over ownership of land and
so, no one saw the need to take care of the trees and they died”, he observed.
Dr. Charles Jebuni, Ag. CEO, SADA |
In
January this year, President Mahama instructed the Board of SADA to in
consultation with the Attorney-General, terminate a 47 million cedis guinea
fowl and afforestation contracts it entered into with Asongtaba Cottage Industries.
An
amount of GH¢32 million out of the overall total was allocated for the afforestation
project. Several years after the contract was signed and the amount disbursed,
nothing concrete according to government was achieved. It emerged through media
investigations that all the seedlings bought and planted had withered.
According
to a statement issued and signed by the President’s Spokesperson Ben Dotse
Malor, the presidency acknowledged the necessary systems had not been put in
place before the contracts were signed. The statement thus requested the
"SADA Board to hold consultations with the Forestry Commission and the
Ministry of Local Government to work out a strategy for the proper
implementation of the afforestation and tree growing project, on a decentralized
basis."
On the way forward, he urged government and for that
matter the incoming SADA Board to award any new contract under the
afforestation programme to an institution that is tried and tested or has a
track record that is there for everyone to see. “For instance, what at all is
wrong with SADA giving such a job to the various District Offices of the
Forestry Commission, NGOs with track records in tree planting and the Department
of Parks and Garden to execute?”, he asked.
He also stressed on the need to effectively involve
communities to understand why there is the need to have trees planted in their
farms or deserted lands so as to ensure that the people fully embrace the idea
and own it.
SADA, a government policy initiative established by an
Act of Parliament (Act 805, 2010) is aimed at addressing the development gap
that exists between Northern and Southern Ghana. SADA’s mandate is to
accelerate the socio-economic development of the Savannah belt through
strategic investment in resource development. It envisions a “Forested North”
by 2030, where agricultural production is modernised and oriented towards a
larger market.
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