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Bushfires destroy 158 wooden high tension poles in UWR

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● Burnt high tension poles

● Burnt high tension poles

 The Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS) in the Upper West Region is worried about the continu­ous burning of high-tension wooden electricity poles in the region due to accidental bushfires.

In the 2021/2022 Dry (Har­mattan) season, the GNFS in the region recorded 158 fire incidents involving high-ten­sion poles but personnel were able to salvage 96 of them from getting burnt.

The harmattan season under review normally be­gins from mid-November to mid-February.

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The Regional Staff Officer of the Service, DOIII Alexis Kodi Suonyiri who made this known in a speech at the first session of the 12th parliament of the Upper West Regional Youth Parliament described the situation as worrying and called for attitudinal change in that regard.

He said that the poles were burnt when people indiscriminately set fire to the bushes around them, particu­larly those along highways.

He could not understand why people continued to set fire to the bush when they were fully aware of the consequences it posed to society and said that the GNFS recorded 32 of such incidents in the year under review.

He stated that the com­mand was putting measures in place to ensure that bush fire would be a thing of the past and stated that aside stepping up education on the need to avoid bush fires, the GNFS had again established bush fire volunteers in many commu­nities across the region to augment the effort of the ser­vice in helping to reduce the indiscriminate setting of bush fires to the barest minimum.

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DOIII Suonyiri said aside the devastating effect of bush fire to climate change, it also denied the soil of its fertility and affected the livelihood of persons who lost their farms to bushfires which were not even started by them.

He lamented the poor enforcement of the bushfire laws in the region as well as the failure of the Municipal and District Assemblies across the region to constitute bush fire control sub-committees to support the work of the GNFS in checking the menace.

The Staff Officer recom­mended the clearing of bushes around high-tension poles in the dry season through com­munal labour to ensure that even if there was bush fire, the poles did not catch fire.

From Lydia Darlington Fordjour, Wa

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Oppong Nkrumah scholarship programme supports 22 students with GHS134,000

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The Member of Parliament for Ofoase Ayirebi, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, has disbursed GHS134,000 to 22 students under the latest round of his Scholarship and Bursaries Programme.

According to a statement from his office, the 22 beneficiaries are enrolled in 16 tertiary institutions across the country.

They are studying various courses, including medicine, marketing, law, public health, midwifery, business administration, education, and secretaryship.

The MP’s office commended the beneficiaries, especially the five students currently studying medicine and physician assistantship, encouraging them to remain committed to their studies.

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The statement indicated that the scholarship initiative, which began in 2017, aims to support brilliant but needy students from the Ofoase Ayirebi Constituency to further their education. So far, about 700 students have benefited from the program.

By: Jacob Aggrey

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Four ‘Pragya’ Operators fined GH¢ 2,400 for obstructing public road at Agbogbloshie

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Four tricycle operators, popularly known as ‘Pragya’, have been prosecuted and fined GH¢600 each equivalent to 50 penalty units by the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) Sanitation Court for obstructing public roads at the Agbogbloshie Market.

The offenders, who were arrested by Public Health Officers of the AMA during a routine enforcement exercise, pleaded guilty to the offence and were subsequently convicted by the court.

The four operators were among the 21 offenders recently arrested at the Agbogbloshie Market for various sanitation and public order violations, including selling on open drains, obstructing walkways, and trading at unauthorised locations.

Speaking after the court proceedings, the Head of Public Health at the AMA, Madam Florence Kuukyi, said the court was lenient with the offenders since it was their first appearance, hence the fine, and warned that subsequent offenders would face stiffer penalties, including imprisonment.

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