Tag: Sango Lagoon

  • Ledzokuku Municipal Assembly dredges Sango Lagoon to avert flooding

    Ledzokuku Municipal Assembly dredges Sango Lagoon to avert flooding

    The Ledzokuku Municipal Assembly in Accra has initiated a dredging project at the Sango Lagoon in Teshie.

    Over the course of three months, the project aims to remove accumulated sediment, debris, and vegetation from the lagoon, thereby restoring its original depth and capacity.

    Chief Executive of the Assembly, Mordecai Quarshie, highlighted that the project will not only improve the lagoon’s condition but also alleviate the challenges faced by fisherfolk in the area given its susceptibility to flooding.

    “We broke ground for the dredging of the Sango Lagoon because it has not been dredged in a long time, and nobody around seems to remember the last time it was dredged. But it is important for it to be dredged to reinforce our flood prevention measures,” he said.

    “We have dredged the entire length of the Sango stream and now at the lagoon, and we are restoring the boundaries of the lagoon to let it hold rain waters. But there is also another reason, which is to enable the fisherfolk to anchor their canoes,” Mr Quarshie added.

    The MCE added that the contractor on the project is Blessed Field and it is expected to be completed in the next three months.

  • LEKMA earmarks over 700 properties for demolition

    Some property owners in the Ledzokuku Municipality would have to find alternative accommodation as the Ledzokuku Municipal Assembly (LEKMA), prepares to pull down their buildings.

    The properties, numbering over 700 have been earmarked for demolition with notices served to the owners.

    Mr Mordecai Quarshie, the Municipal Chief Executive of LEKMA who disclosed this to the Ghana News Agency said the houses, most of which have been built in water ways do not have permits.

    He said following recent floods in the municipality, and a directive from the president, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo Addo to demolish structures built in water ways, the Assembly had been left with no choice than to carry out the exercise.

    He disclosed that 320 of the houses were situated along the basins of the Sango Lagoon, with the remaining ones around the Kor River and other places within the municipality.

    Mr Quarshie who indicated that the exercise had become necessary to avert future floods as well as the loss of lives said, as much as possible, the Assembly would put a human touch to the exercise.

    “We are not happy undertaking such exercises but it has become necessary evil that we cannot shelve,” he said.

    The MCE said the Assembly would not back down in its mandate to ensure that physical developments in the municipality are done within the confines of the law.

    He further appealed to prospective property owners to run a check with the Assembly when buying land and also acquire a building permit before proceeding with any form of development.

    He also mentioned that the Assembly would conduct an investigation into claims of negligence by its staff whose responsibilities were to ensure that the buildings earmarked for demolition should not have come up in the first place.

    “We will investigate their conduct and recommend punitive actions against any official found culpable,” he said.

    The Assembly in carrying out the directives of the president as well as its mandate had in the last couple of weeks pulled down hundreds of properties and illegal structures within the municipality.

    Mr Quarshie said, the owners of these properties would be surcharged for the exercise.

    Source: GNA