Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By
William Yaw Owusu
Thursday, September 4, 2014
A professor of marine and fishery science at the
University of Ghana has told the Judgement Debt Commission that the government
cannot continue to overlook communities displaced by the floods in the Volta
Basin area.
Prof. Patrick Kwabena Ofori Danso said the construction
of the Akosombo Dam in the 1960s brought floods that rendered the people of
Akroso and Asukawkaw hopeless and the government had not shown much concern as
expected.
Prof. Danso was testifying in the matter in which he
is said to have collected a whooping GH¢1,440,908.63 as compensation for lands
destroyed by the Volta River floods in the 1960s.
Cabinet
Approval
Cabinet in July 2008 approved a consolidated amount
of compensation totaling GH¢138million for various stools/families in Pai,
Apaaso, Makango, Ahmandi and Kete Krachi Traditional Areas and about 57 groups
were said to have benefited from the amount.
Records at the commission revealed that GH¢71million
has been paid so far to the various claimants and the disbursement of the
remaining GH¢67million has been put on hold to enable the government deal with
discrepancies in the payments.
Sole-Commissioner’s
Shock
Sole-Commissioner Justice Yaw Apau said he did not
understand why communities that were resettled by the government in the 1960s,
given communal lands and paid compensation for crops destroyed by the Volta
River floods could turn around to claim cash compensation almost 50 years down
the line.
Majority of the witnesses have since told the
commission that one Nana Asetena Mensah, a leader in the communities in Krachi,
was the man who had commissioned Kwadwo Ababio & Co, a consultant and
surveyors to survey the submerged area out of which the individual plotting
were done.
Black
Flies Attack
“Disease we have never heard of are now with us at
where we were settled. Our people are developing temporal or total blindness
due to attacks by black flies,” Prof. Danso complained to the Commission of
Enquiry investigating the payment of judgement debts.
Flanked by John Gyamfi who leads the Kwame Donkoh
Family, Prof. Danso, a member of the Kwabena Bosompem Family within the Krachi Traditional
Council said “I have an uncle whose whole nucleus family is blind,” adding “At
Asukawkaw for instance you have to always wear trousers and long sleeves to be
able to walk about.”
He also said that epilepsy had become common in the
area and wondered how the people were going to survive in the current state of
affairs.
Submerged
Land
He said “Our land size of about 27,000 was submerged
because Akroso was within the confluence of the river and all the government
could do was to resettle us together with two other communities on the 1,000
acres land.”
He said the resettlement deprived them of their
livelihood and the new generation did not have any land for use and added that the
two families had put in a joint claim after Messrs Kojo Ababio had helped them
to merge the site plans.
Prof. Danso said the land was under Trans Volta
Togoland which later became a German Protectorate and claimed that they had
statutory declaration to represent the families.
He said the maps tendered in evidence were made in
1974 and 1978 respectively and it was merged in 2007 when they were filing the
claim for compensation and the 1,000 acre land given them to settle was shared
with Otiso Amanfrom and Asempaneye.
Dormanbin
Claims
Earlier Nicholas Addo, assisted by his counsel Kwame
Yankyera tendered in evidence a document used to secure GH¢1,592,545.06 from the government as compensation for
Dormanbin lands and Justice Apau remarked that “this is a properly-made power
of attorney.”
The witness told the commission that six claimants
had given him the power to put in the application around 2004 and also tendered
in evidence a properly titled site plan.
He said he could not tell if the earlier people
affected by the floods were paid compensation for loss of crops and insisted
that the people of Dormanbin were never settled by the government.
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