Residents of Tamale and
Sagnarigu District in the Northern Region of Ghana are increasingly engaging in
open defaecation, a phenomenon that has the tendency to compromise public
health safety.
The practice is very rampant in areas such as Nyohini,
Gumbihini, Warishei, Jakarayili, Jilsonayili, Choggu, Kpalsi, Kalpohin,
Koblimahagu, Kukuo, Changli, Duanayili, Bulpiela, Zogbeli, Aboabo, Kanvili,
Gumani, Fuo, NVTI, CEPS, Town and Country Planning, Controller and Accountant
General, CHRAJ and among others.
Open defaecation is an age-old practice and very
common in most communities in Northern Ghana. Roughly, over 80 percent of homes
(estimate ours) in the Tamale Metropolis and Sagnarigu District do not have
toilet facilities. Even in homes where there are toilet facilities, our checks
have revealed that they are broken down whereas some landlords and landladies
have converted spaces for such facilities into rooms for rent.
Furthermore, the few public or communal toilet
facilities are either broken down, unkempt or far away from homes as some of
the residents claimed in an interview with Savannahnews during our
investigation.
Mohammed Awal, a resident of Nyohini said “We are far
away from the public toilets and there are no toilet facilities in our homes,
so we have no option but to use available lands or open spaces around. We are
aware of the adverse effects but since there are no alternatives, what do we do”,
he asked.
The
practice of open defaecation does not only cost Ghana US$79million a year but
also poses the greatest danger to human health particularly for the most
vulnerable, including children.
The Tamale
Metropolis and Sagnarigu District are among twelve districts out of the 26 in
the Northern Region to score zero percent in sanitation in the 2015/2016
District League Table (DLT) compiled by CDD-Ghana and UNICEF. The other districts
are Bole, West Gonja, Mamprugu-Moagduri, Central Gonja, Bunkpurugu-Yunyoo, Sawla-Tuna-Kalba,
West Mamprusi, North-Gonja, Chereponi and Gushiegu.
A few years ago, before the creation of the Sagnarigu
District, Tamale was adjudged the ‘cleanest city’ in Ghana by the Ministry of
Local Government, Ghana Tourist Authority and Zoomlion Ghana Limited in 2005,
2008 and 2010 respectively. But that cannot be said of the same city in recent
times.
For the past few years, residents have been very
negligent when it comes to keeping their surroundings clean. Consistently,
litterbins placed along most principal streets within the metropolis have been
stolen by some unscrupulous persons and converted into domestic waste bins in
their homes whereas some use them to fetch water.
According to UNICEF, about 22 million Ghanaians currently
do not have access to improved sanitation facilities whereas 5 million are
engaged in open defaecation. Also, only about 15 percent of Ghanaians have
access to improved water and sanitation while the situation is 5 percent in the
three Regions of the North.
Northern
Regional Coordinator of Open Defaecation Free Programme, Mr. Shaibu Dauda, told
this reporter that about 72 percent of the entire population of the region
engage in open defaecation. He added that only 5 percent out of the total
population also have toilet facilities in their homes whereas 13 percent are
committed to the use of such facilities.
The Assemblyman for Nyohini Electoral Area, Mr.
Ibrahim Abdul-Razak Naporow said: “There are only two public toilet facilities
in the community which are not enough for a population of over five thousand
people. Some people go to the Aboabo Forest Reserve while others take advantage
of available Farmlands within the community to attend to natures call”.
Nonetheless, the Tamale Metropolitan Assembly is
making efforts to curb the menace of open defaecation, he noted, adding that
“The Assembly in collaboration with INTAGRA, a non- governmental organization and
HFC Bank have made available a loan facility for interested households or
landlords to secure for the construction of their own toilet facilities”.
Ghana
was in 2015 ranked second by Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) after Sudan
in Africa for open defecation,
with 19 percent of its population resorting to that kind of sanitation
practice. Within the same year, the World Health Organization also ranked Ghana
as 7th dirtiest country
in the world.
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