It has
emerged that, an excavator belonging to the Northern Regional Coordinating
Council is being used by illegal sand winners to destroy the immediate environment
along the banks of the White Volta River, thereby threatening the life of the
river.
The excavator with registration number GV 3295-15 is
reported to have left the premises of the Northern Regional Minister’s official
residence where it had been parked since it was brought into the region several
months ago.
But the minister, Salifu Saeed, denied having any foreknowledge
or approving of the earth moving equipment to be given to the illegal sand
winners after he was ‘questioned’ by journalists.
This revelation came to light following the Regional
Minister’s official visit to the river side to ascertain the level of
destruction caused by activities of the illegal sand winners and their impact
on a Water Treatment Plant belonging to the Ghana Water Company Limited (GWCL).
Mr. Saeed, who was accompanied by members
of the Regional Security Council (REGSEC), gave the illegal sand winners a
one-week ultimatum to relocate from upstream to downstream to continue with
their work.
He cautioned that, failure by the illegal
sand winners to relocate within the one-week ultimatum would incur the wrath of
REGSEC which he was the chairman as they would no longer be room for human face
approach to the situation.
“You can get graders to come and create
a path to the downstream so that you can have access road to the place where
you can get quality sand to mine”, he said.
Mr. Saeed admitted that, the activities
of the sand winners was threatening the existence of communities in Tamale,
Sagnarigu and other surrounding districts if they were allowed to continue
winning sand at the upstream.
The Regional Manager of the GWCL,
Engineer Stephen Ndebugre, expressed concern over the rate at which the sand
winning activities were negatively impacting water treatment and supply to
residents of five districts in the area.
According to him, the GWCL was now
using more alum than ever before to treat the river water for supply compared
to previously when they only used few bags to treat it.
“From 20 bags we are now using about 48
bags and sometime past we were using about 90 bags. For a small plant like this
we shouldn’t be using that amount of water but because of the pollution we are
compelled to use that amount”, he noted.
The White Volta River also known as the
Nawuni River, the main production source of potable water for residents of the
Tamale Metropolis, Savelugu/Nanton Municipality as well as the Tolon, Sagnarigu
and Kumbungu Districts, has come under serious environmental threat.
Years of uncontrolled sand winning by
building contractors and owners of tipper-trucks, has destroyed farmlands and
the ecosystem along the river banks including economic and medicinal trees. As
a result, the depth of the river has reduced drastically over the years due to
silts which have incapacitated its water holding ability.
More worrying is the fact that, the
silting of the river is also posing a great danger to residents of the five metropolitan,
municipal and district assemblies (MMDAs), threatening the river’s future
capacity to supply the required volume of water to over 500,000 people.
The shallowness of the river has also
resulted into perennial flooding of communities along its banks which sometimes
have led to loss of lives and property. In fact, this further reduces the
amount of water the river feeds into the Akosombo Dam, the country’s major
source of hydroelectric power.
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