Community leaders and fisherfolk from Tsokome Community in Bortianor, a fishing enclave in Accra, are calling on the government to dredge the local river and construct a canal connecting the sea to the river to enhance their fishing activities.
Authorities are becoming increasingly alarmed as weeds progressively clog the community’s river. Leaders point out that a formerly existing canal, now obstructed by accumulated sand, compounds the issue.
They elaborate that this obstruction hampers the flow of sea and river water, adversely affecting fish yields and driving up fish prices in the vicinity.
Speaking to ChannelOne News, Emmanuel Aryitey, the Assembly member for the Bortianor Electoral area, shed light on the challenges encountered.
He said, “The canoes find it difficult to move on the water as they get locked because the river is shallow now. And when the river is shallow, they will not get fish. The deeper the river is, the more it breeds fishes for us. Now fish is very expensive in this community. You may think it is a fishing community and so you will get it at a cheaper price, but it is very expensive as we don’t get it like we used to get. We used to get the small fishes that we used to enjoy our kenkey but now we don’t get it again. We have to go far to the Densu river.”
He stressed the immediate necessity of river dredging, highlighting that residents have resorted to dumping waste along the riverbanks.
“You see, because the river is shallow, when the water is spilled from Weija dam, it overflows into people’s houses. Because it is shallow, the water doesn’t sit in the river. That is why the people are dumping rubbish all over here, which is worrying.”
Fisherman and traditional leader in Tsokome, Sentse Aklama, narrated a recent river accident and urged prompt government intervention.
“Recently, more than thirty school children crossing the river on a boat perished, and nothing has been done by the government on the issue. It is disheartening. The lives of our children are at risk.”
Several fishermen also spoke to ChannelOne News, underscoring the need for the government to address these urgent issues.
One of them, Francis Susuawa, expressed concern about the inability of women to cross the river due to its current state and the absence of the canal.
He stated, “The situation prevents the women who usually buy fish from us to come all the way to us on the river, which is usually disturbing. This has seriously impacted our job negatively. So if the government could come to our aid and fix the canal for us, that would be awesome so that could serve as a channel for us to meet the women who buy from us.
In the meantime, the Assembly member affirms that government intervention will yield revenue for the nation.
“All that we are praying for is that the government will come and dredge the river to its original state. It was from Bojo to Kusum Beach. That was how it was. And the canal was in it. It was very, very beautiful. If the government invests money into this river, the government is going to get its money back.”
Accra experienced heavy rainfall on Monday, May 6, leading to flooding in certain areas.
The Odawna River particularly illustrates the repercussions of inadequate waste management, with individuals observed gathering plastic waste from its waters.
Meanwhile the flooding underscores urgent need for improved infrastructure and urban planning to mitigate such disasters.
It also emphasizes the importance of community efforts in waste reduction and proper disposal.
Ultimately, this event serves as a reminder of the interconnectedness between environmental stewardship and public healthin urban areas.
Watch full video below:
Heavy rain hits Accra on Monday, May 6 causing flooding in some parts. This is the situation at the Odawna River. The situation highlights poor waste management practices, and also shows some individuals collecting plastic waste from the river. #CitiNewsroom#AccraFloodspic.twitter.com/Wytin9dC7N
Reaching the source of the Tigris is not an easy task. Where a dirt road ends, a small path leads over the shoulder of a jagged mountain whose peaks are gnawed like fingernails. The path becomes a goat track, treacherously narrow, winding around the hillside until it is halted by a tumble of springs. These form a torrential stream that disappears into a vast, arched tunnel. When the nascent river emerges 1.5km later, it is tamed by whatever happened deep inside the cave.
The ancient Assyrians believed this to be a place where the physical and spiritual worlds collide. Three thousand years ago, their armies travelled upstream to offer sacrifices. A relief of Tiglath-Pileser, King of Assyria from 1114-1076 BCE still stands at the mouth of the tunnel. Time has dulled his edges, but he remains upright and regal, pointing out across his empire.
The source of the Tigris lies in present-day Turkey, where it flows south-east out of the Taurus Mountains. It skims a pinched corner of north-east Syria and then passes through the cities of Mosul, Tikrit and Samarra on its way to Baghdad. In southern Iraq, the sprawling Mesopotamian Marshes absorb the Tigris close to the confluence with its sister river, the Euphrates, and both flow together to the Persian Gulf.
For 10 weeks, the author and a small team travelled the entire length of the Tigris river (Credit: Ruby/Alamy)
Around 8,000 years ago, our hunter-gatherer ancestors settled in the great floodplain between these two rivers and developed agriculture and animal husbandry, leading many to call the area the “Cradle of Civilisation“. From these early city-states – like Eridu, Ur and Uruk – came the invention of the wheel and the written word. Codified legal systems, sailing boats, beer brewing and love songs followed, among other inventions.
And yet, because of the decades of conflict that have plagued modern Iraq, the fact that the Tigris has guarded and shaped our shared human heritage is easily forgotten.
For 10 weeks in 2021, a small team and I travelled roughly 2,000km by boat and overland from the Tigris’ source to where it empties into the Persian Gulf – a journey one advisor told me likely hadn’t been attempted since the Ottoman era. My goal was to chart the river’s historical importance and tell its story through the voices of those who live along its banks, while also investigating the threats to its future. A combination of geo-political instability, poor water management and climate change has led some to state that this once-mighty river is dying. I hoped our journey would be a reminder of what emerged from this land, and what we would collectively lose if the river that birthed civilisation dried up.
Eighty kilometres from the Tigris’ source in Eğil, Turkey, the ramparts of an Assyrian castle have been modified by the Greeks, Armenians, Byzantines, Romans and Ottomans who all later settled along the river’s banks. Further downstream in Diyarbakır, Turkey, where another fortress still stands that has existed in some incarnation since the Bronze Age, a similar layering has taken place. Today, the city is the de-facto capital of Turkey’s large Kurdish population, and in its labyrinthine alleyways, we rested in a basalt courtyard under the shade of a mulberry tree, transfixed by the haunting sounds echoing around the walls.
Diyarbakır is one of the major settlements along the Tigris and Turkey’s largest Kurdish-majority city (Credit: Huseyin Bostanci/Getty Images)
There, a woman in a quilted beige jacket sat on a bench, her right hand cupped around her ear. Her name was Feleknaz Aslan, and for 30 minutes, her booming voice held us captive. She was a dengbêj, a Kurdish singing storyteller, whose ancestors have passed histories and folktales down through generations. Aslan’s song was about a doomed love affair on the banks of the Tigris. Most dengbêj are men now, she said, but the practice was invented by women. It was a way of preserving identity and culture, and she explained that the Tigris is a common backdrop in these songs – recognised then as now as a central feature of life for Kurds in this region.
South-east of Diyarbakır, the Tigris etches a deep canyon through the Tur Abdin region of Turkey’s Taurus mountains. For centuries, this has been the heartland of the ancient Syriac Orthodox Church, whose origins date back to the dawn of Christianity. We climbed to a remote 4th-Century monastery, Mor Evgin, which clings to the cliff as if suspended by faith alone.
Inside the nave, plaster applied by some of the world’s first Christians still stuck to the walls, and spidery Syriac script crawled around the walls in webs of prayer. I lit a candle in an alcove and bowed my head. It was another reminder of how the Tigris’ fertile watershed allowed Judaism, Christianity and Islam to flourish (Abraham, a spiritual model for each faith, is said to have come from here), and how these populations later took their goods, ideas, beliefs to the far corners of the world.
We travelled by small boat whenever possible, though access to the Tigris is often tricky. In Turkey, navigating the river is difficult because of a series of highly contentious dam-building projects. In Syria, the Tigris is an international border. It wasn’t until Mosul, a city carved in two by the river, that we were finally able to travel more freely.
Mosul is one of the oldest cities in the world (Credit: Universal Images Group North America LLC / DeAgostini/Alamy)
When ISIS occupied Mosul from 2014-2017, it forbade residents from using the Tigris and Mosul’s Old City on the river’s west bank became the group’s last refuge.
During the fighting, every bridge in Mosul spanning the river was destroyed and some jihadists reportedly jumped into the Tigris in an attempt to escape during the final battle. Historically, the river might have been a connective force, but we saw how it became a point of conflict.
Mosul’s Arabic name, Al-Mawsiil, means “the linking point”, likely because it was a crossroads of trade and a major hub along the Tigris between Diyarbakır and Basra. Established in the 7th Century BCE, it’s one of the oldest cities in the world, and during its pinnacle in the 12th-Century AD, it not only wielded great power and influence over the region but became ethnically and religiously diverse. This confluence of cultures created a rich cultural space, and while much of the Old City was destroyed by ISIS, the city’s spirit lingers on.
“People think we have nothing left,” said Salman Khairalla, who co-founded the Tigris River Protectors’ Association and a companion on our journey. “But there’s so much along the Tigris that survived it all. And more than that, we Iraqis always rebuild. We will never accept destruction.”
In Mosul, the toppled 12th-Century Great Mosque of al-Nouri is being reconstructed with a huge endowment from Unesco and the UAE. Just as striking is the community-led cultural revival. Opposite al-Nuri is Baytna, meaning “our home”, where young Moslawi artists have created a multi-purpose museum, cafe and venue space by refurbishing an old Ottoman home. “We don’t want people to forget what happened here,” Sara Salem Al-Dabbagh, one of the space’s founders, told me. “But we want to create opportunities for employment, and a place to support people with skills.”
An ancient gate marks the entrance to Ashur, the first capital of the Assyrian empire (Credit: imageBROKER.com GmbH & Co. KG/Alamy)
The Tigris carried us on to Ashur, the first capital of the Assyrian empire, where a 4,000-year-old ziggurat looms over the river. In the desert beyond were Nimrud, a later Assyrian capital and the 2,000-year-old caravan city of Hatra. All three were damaged by ISIS, but heroic teams of local archaeologists are doing their best to protect the sites, even with the scant resources available.
In a region that often makes international news for its war and hostility, one of the most lasting impressions of my journey was that of unadulterated hospitality. Even during Ramadan, tea was prepared by hosts who were themselves fasting. Many a poor goat ended up atop a rice platter for us in lavish banquets. In the village of Kifrij, the mayor told us how two young shepherds smuggled civilians across the Tigris from ISIS-held territory to safety at night using only a tractor inner tube. I found that no amount of recent violence could shatter residents’ willingness to help strangers and their sense of generosity. Like strands of the braided river itself, the Tigris is woven throughout all of these stories; as a boundary between life and death, but also as the vehicle for great acts of kindness.
We spent a Sunday with the Mandaeans, the smallest, and perhaps oldest, ethno-religious group in Iraq. The Mandaeans believe in regular baptisms as a source of spiritual nourishment and a way to cleanse sins. Baptisms must be performed in running water and the Tigris, as one of the two rivers that allowed the faith to first flourish, is still home to many members of the community.
I watched as, one by one, a priest led eight women to the Tigris and gently submerged them, whispering prayers in Mandaic; an ancient Aramaic dialect for which they are the sole guardians. “The water here is the same as in the next universe,” the priest’s assistant told me.
The Mandaeans believe the Tigris is sacred (Credit: dpa picture alliance/Alamy)
The river that the Mandaeans and so many communities rely on is in danger. But from activists like Khairalla to the archaeologists of Ashur to the Moslawi artists reclaiming their culture, I found that the Tigris’ guardians are not willing to give up and are committed to rebuilding.
When I asked Khairalla about the future of the river, he said simply, “Iraqis must always have hope. Whatever generations before us do, we can change.”
DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana
The Ghana Police Service says that it has retrieved the bodies of two of its officers who are alleged to have drowned in the Oda River in the Ashanti Region.
In a social media post, the Police said that investigation into the matter was still underway.
The two officers, Lance Corporal Akwasi Boateng and Stephen Kyeremeh, are said to have been in pursuit of some suspected criminals when the canoe ferrying them capsized.
The alleged criminals, during the hot chase, were believed to have crossed the river to the other side leaving the officers with no choice than to follow them.
But their canoe which capsized midway through the chase.
Update: Suspected Drowning of Two Police Officers.
The bodies of the two Police Officers have been retrieved from the Oda River. Investigation still ongoing. pic.twitter.com/CLpt1JdZmv
— Ghana Police Service (@GhPoliceService) July 17, 2020
Work has begun on the dredging of the Kpetoe River to help solve the perennial flooding of parts of Kpetoe township, the capital of Agotime Ziope District.
The three-kilometre project is currently underway.
Mr. John Kwaku Amenyah, Agotime Ziope District Chief Executive (DCE) who disclosed this to the Ghana News Agency at Kpetoe on Monday said the project was expected to be completed in two weeks.
“The completion of this project will bring relief to the people as it will put to rest their horrid annual displacement and destruction of their properties”, he said.
The DCE said work had also resume on the construction of a culvert on River Akwetey, which has been stalled since 2008 and was also expected to be completed before the rain sets in this year.
He said the project when completed would link Agorhokpo and its surrounding villages, which hitherto were cut off from the rest of the District and marketing centres.
Mr. Amenyah said it would also enhance access to health and other public facilities and hope they would be completed on schedule.
An Eight-year-old pupil has drowned in river Densu after leaving school for ill-health
The body of the deceased, Lawrencia Amankwa, a pupil of Eastfield Academy in Nyamekrom a suburb of the New Juaben South Municipality of the Eastern Region, has been deposited at the Eastern Regional Hospital Mortuary.
The incident occurred around 12:30 pm on Tuesday, February 25, 2020.
Starr News has gathered that the deceased left school after she complained of not feeling well only to get drowned few hours later.
Assembly Member for Nyamekrom Electoral Area, Enock Boahene narrated to Starr News that “deceased- Lawrencia Amankwa followed two friends of her to the river to swim but got drown in the process.
The friends then later reported to the Senior brother after which he rushed and dived into the river in an attempt to rescue her, but was pronounced dead when she was rushed to Koforidua Regional hospital â€
A 16-year-old has drowned in the Pra River in Twifo Praso in the Twifo Atti-Morkwa District of the Central Region.
Report gathered by Kasapa FM News Yaw Boagyan indicates that Michael left home Saturday morning for extra classes but after he closed he decided not to go home but accompanied his friends to the river to have fun.
The deceased reportedly swam in the deep portion of the river with his friends and was not able to come out of the water alive.
His colleagues after realizing Michael had drowned, rushed home to inform their parents who relayed the information to the Police Commander DSP Charles Addai Boateng who organized his men to the riverside.
Upon arriving at the scene, the Police retrieved footwear, mobile phone, school bag and Ghana National Identification card bearing the name Michael Gaddah.
The body has been conveyed to the Twifo Praso Government Hospital for preservation and autopsy.
The police have commenced investigations into the incident.
Uganda has received an application for a licence to build a hydroelectric power plant on the Nile River from a Chinese firm, documents seen by Reuters News Agency show.
The $1.4bn plant, if approved, will expand the East African country’s power generation by 40 percent, a regulatory official who also confirmed the application, said.
The firm, POWERCHINA International Group Limited (PIGL), wants to develop the Ayago Hydroelectric Power Station, located on a section of the Nile between lakes Kyoga and Albert, according to its licence application.
“We have called for comments from the public on their proposed project,” Julius Wandera, spokesman for the state-run power regulator, Electricity Regulatory Authority (ERA) told Reuters on Tuesday.
The ERA licences all power generators in the country and is also responsible for setting generation and end-user power tariffs.
The Ayago power plant will have a capacity of 840 megawatts (MW) and, when successfully developed, would be Uganda’s largest power plant.
The Karuma hydroelectric dam, upstream of Ayago and due to be completed early this year by China’s Synohydro Corporation, is currently Uganda’s largest power project.
The ERA would also conduct its own due diligence on POWERCHINA International to ascertain whether it had the financial and technical capacity to execute the project, Wandera said.
“By April we should be communicating our final decision on their application to them,” he said.
According to their application, the firm plans to raise funds for the project through a 25-75 percent mix of equity and debt.
The project could potentially ramp up Uganda’s generation capacity by 40 percent to about 2,800MW according to calculations from data available from the energy ministry.
In recent years, Uganda has been wooing private-sector energy investors and taking loans from China and other sources to help boost power production to meet fast-growing demand.
To make the sector attractive to foreign investors, the government abolished subsidies for consumers and introduced a tariff-setting system that is benchmarked on movements in key parameters such as inflation, foreign exchange and oil prices.
Uganda is one of six countries that signed a 2010 Cooperative Framework Agreement (CFA) that allows upstream Nile basin countries to develop projects along the river without Egypt’s consent as it was in a previous colonial-era agreement on the use of Nile waters.
Building dams on the Nile has proven controversial in recent years with Egypt, which almost entirely depends on the water from the river, seeing them as a national security threat.
Ethiopia is currently building a dam on its section of the Nile. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam is about 70 percent complete and promises to provide much-needed electricity to Ethiopia’s 100 million people.
However, Egyptian officials are concerned that filling the reservoir behind the dam could significantly reduce the amount of Nile water available to Egypt.
The two countries are negotiating a way forward and are expected to strike a deal in the coming weeks.
The West Akyem Municipal Director of National Disaster Management Organization(NADMO), Addo Kwasi Annor, said the body of the deceased has been buried with the supervision of Police and Environmental officers and NADMO.
The widow told EIB Network Eastern Regional correspondence, Kojo Ansah that, the deceased husband, a farmer, left home a week ago but did not return.