Mr. Awal Ahmed |
State and non-state
actors in the Karaga District of the Northern Region of Ghana, have agreed
there is insufficient service delivery and accessibility in the water, health
and education sectors and have called for increased investment.
At a sensitisation forum facilited by the Rural Initiatives for Self
Empowerment-Ghana (RISE-Ghana) to discuss the state of public service
delivery in the Karaga District, participants said more needed to be done in the
areas identified in order to bring improvement in the living standards of all citizens.
The forum was funded by the Ghana Centre for Democratic
Development (CDD-Ghana) with support from the William and Flora Foundation as
part of a project that seeks to improve public goods and service delivery in Ghana.
The project- dubbed “I Am Aware (IAA)”, seeks
to align citizens’ desire for quality public goods and service delivery with public
officials accountability and responsiveness, by generating accessible or reader-friendly
information on the state of public goods and service delivery in the education,
health, water, sanitation, agriculture, roads and security sectors via a
website www.iamawareghana.com.
For instance, the non-state actors comprising
of youth, traditional leaders, religious leaders and informal sector workers were
of the view that, the current state of the water sector in the district was worse,
a sharp contrast with the position of the state actors (local authorities).
The participants therefore
cited health, water and education as priority service delivery areas requiring
urgent attention and charged local government authorities to make more
investments in the coming years in order to attain quality healthcare and improved
literacy rate.
The Karaga District is one of the 26
districts in the Northern Region of Ghana. It was carved out of the
Gushiegu-Karaga District in August, 2004 backed by Legislative Instrument (L.I.
2146). According to the 2010 Population and Housing Census, its population is
77,706 representing 3.1% of the region’s total population. Males constitute
48.0% and females represent 52.0%. The population is entirely rural.
The Karaga Districts is the
least developed district in the Northern Region as it placed 26th on
the District League Table (DLT) which measures the level of development using
indicators of Health, Water, Sanitation, Education, Security and Governance. It
placed 26th regionally and 215th nationally (an
improvement of one spot from the least developed district placing 216 in 2014).
The
objective of the recent
forum in Karaga was to create an
enabling environment for improvement in the delivery of public goods and
services by mobilizing state and
non-state actors to empower them with
data on the current state of public service delivery in their district.
According to the Executive Director of
RISE-Ghana, Awal Ahmed, the forum was also to collect the views of participants
on the state of public goods and services, assess the current approaches in
service delivery and their views on the role of data as well as current data
sources used for programming at the district level.
Participants were taken through the current
state of public service delivery in their district using the 2015 DLT and the
2016 District Medium Term Development Plans (DMTDPs) as discussion documents.
This afforded participants the opportunity to
compare the relevance of plans and budget projections as well as generate
dialogue by showing evidence of areas that needed more attention.
For instance, in the
2016 MTDPs, the Karaga District Assembly projected to invest GH¢2,665,167.00 in education, health
GH¢2,016,000.00
and water, sanitation and environment GH¢144,333.00 whereas in the DLT the
district scored 21.6 percent in security, health 19.5 percent, water 74.4
percent, education 49.0 percent and sanitation 0 percent.
During open discussions, the District Chief Executive
for Karaga, Mr. Imoro Yakubu, told organisers: “Your presentation today is an
eye opener, when the District League Table was released last year, the media
created a bad impression that we were not doing our work well. Today, you have
clarified that, it is all about how well developed or not we are and areas of
service delivery we need to improve upon. With this understanding, we can
better involve our citizens in the governance process and deliver targeted
improved services” he said.
“I have learnt
a lot today and now I know that Karaga is the least developed district in
Northern Region. I have visited the www.iamawareghana.com website already and
downloaded some information that we can use to empower our groups to do their
advocacy. Information is power and I want to be an active volunteer of IAA to
tell people to visit the website. I am happy that the data comes from the state
actors themselves. When citizens are well informed, they become empowered to
engage and demand their rights and improved service delivery” –Suweidu Abdulai,
a representative of GDCA, a local NGO in Karaga District.
Alhassan Mahmud, another non-state actor also said: “The
IAA project is very good because it allows us to access data to make a solid
case when meeting the big people to demand services. It will encourage us to
compare what they have and what is there.”
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