Most Rev. Philip Naameh |
The Metropolitan Archbishop
of Tamale, Most Reverend Philip Naameh, has appealed to the next government
after the December 7 presidential and parliamentary elections, to as a matter
of urgency, consider creating two more regions out of the Northern Region.
According
to him, this was going to ensure the equitable distribution of resources
towards addressing poverty, illiteracy and other developmental challenges that
were contributing to prolong conflicts in the region.
The
chairman of the Northern Regional Peace Council, who said these at the opening session
of the 2016 Ghana Catholic Bishops Conference in Tamale, also urged whichever
party would emerge victorious on December 7 to consider as a matter of urgency and
make the region a peaceful place.
He
indicated that, the region was noted for having the most violent conflicts
saying, “Sustained violence and conflicts in Northern Region have resulted in
the lost of human capital as well as the destruction of socio-economic
infrastructure including schools and clinics, significantly halting and even
reversing the development process in the area”.
Under
theme: “Reconciliation With God, Humanity and Nature in The Year of Mercy”, the
conference which started on Saturday October 8 and expected end on October 16,
brought together all Bishops and Archbishops of the Roman Catholic in Ghana.
The
Ghana Catholic Bishops' Conference is a religious organisation having its legal
foundation in the Canon Law of the Roman Catholic Church, which applies to all
Catholic Churches of the Roman Rite throughout the world. The Bishops'
Conference, according to the Canon Law of the Catholic Church (Canon 447-459),
is the central Body of the Church in Ghana. Its purpose is to deliberate on
matters of concern to the Church in Ghana and to encourage activities in
accordance with the needs of the times.
Thus,
during the one week conference in Tamale, the Bishops would deliberate on
issues related to the church in Ghana as well as other issues of national
concern particularly the 2016 presidential and parliamentary elections. They
would also issue a communiqué at the end of the conference.
Most
Rev. Naameh also bemoaned the response of government to conflicts in the region
was very inadequate, and that it needed a more decisive intervention if it was
to make Northern Region an area of peace.
Bishops and Archbishops |
“Very
often it is very limited to just fire-fire fighting. There is a conflict,
government sends soldiers to go and scare people to run away and hide. But
those value systems which make them (parties involve in conflict) feel not
included, still continue to persist.
“Fundamentally,
these conflicts are about a great pressure put on increasingly scarce
resources. Whether it’s a question of land where we have a population explosion
in that area, you have various ethnic groups having to compete for this very
limited land which brings about conflict”, he observed.
Like
people in all other parts of Ghana, the Archbishop of Tamale, said Dagombas,
Gonjas and the people of the Northern Region were peace loving people.
The
Regent of Dagbon Kampakuya-Naa Abdulai Andani in a statement read for him by
Kasuli-Naa, indicated that the people of Dagbon needed peace and reconciliation
more than anyone else. “I pray that God grants us the courage to seek
reconciliation”, he added.
He
appealed to the Bishops’ Conference to also pray for the entire nation of Ghana
as it prepared for the December elections.
Kampakuya-Naa
also commended the Roman Catholic Church for the enormous developmental
projects it had provided the people of Ghana and more particularly the people
of Yendi and Dagbon as a whole.
Meanwhile,
the outgoing President of the Ghana Catholic Bishops’ Conference and Bishop of
Mampong Diocese, Most Rev. Joseph Osei-Bonsu, called on all citizens to ensure
peace before, during and after the elections.
According
to him, there was also the need for reconciliation among families and citizens
in order to attain forgiveness from God.
He
further cited the destruction of vegetation cover through deforestation,
illegal mining, bushfires and water pollution among others as things that were
bad, and urged citizens to seek reconciliation with nature by desisting from
such acts.
No comments:
Post a Comment