Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By
William Yaw Owusu
Friday, October 17, 2014
The Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) has told the
Commission of Enquiry investigating the payment of judgement debts that it has
abandoned the landfill site acquired by the government at Kwabenya in Accra.
According to Graham Owusu Sarbarh, AMA’s Projects
Coordinator, even though the government acquired the 350 acre land under E.I. 1
of 2007, continuous agitation and demonstrations by residents of the area
compelled the assembly to look elsewhere for waste management.
Testifying before the Sole-Commissioner yesterday over
unpaid compensation for the land, Mr. Sarbah said told Justice Yaw Apau that
immediately the land was acquired, the AMA constructed a link road to the site
and tried to commence business but it was vehemently disrupted.
Road
construction
“The moment we constructed the roads, there were a
lot of agitations from residents. They said they could not trust the AMA when
it comes to waste management. I remember then Vice President Aliu Mahama’s convoy
was stoned at one point when he visited the site.”
He said since it was a donor-funded project, the
World Bank expected the government to sort out all outstanding environmental
and other social issues before they could commit themselves but once it was
being frustrated the donors wanted to look elsewhere.
The witness said at one point the assembly engaged a
consultant to educate the residents about the usefulness of the landfill site
but they would not budge.
“The project did not start apart from the road we
constructed. The AMA never took a gramme of waste to the site,” he said.
He said that later AMA boss Alfred Oko Vanderpuije visited
the site and saw massive encroachment adding “while they were blocking the
consultant from engaging them, others were busily developing the land.”
The Projects Coordinator said as a result, the
assembly in September 24, 2010 wrote to the Ministry of Local Government and
Rural Development to discontinue the use of the site but there was no response
from the ministry.
He said currently, “there is not even an acre of
land at the site for compensation to be paid,” adding “it is up to the Lands
Commission to remove the Executive Instrument or pay compensation.”
However, Justice Apau said that “I think it should
be the ministry and not Lands Commission that should remove the Executive
Instrument if the AMA is no longer interested in the land.”
Adonten
SHS lands
Later, the matter of who is the rightful owner and
whether lands were donated voluntarily for the development of Adonten Senior
High School in Aburi became the subject of debate at the commission.
The land was acquired by the government in 1974 and
the E.I. was formally issued in 1978 but a witness Nartey Raymond Kwao Tettey
claims the land belonged to descendants of Awo Amene of the Yeboa Akwatia Agona
family in Aburi and that compensation had not been paid to the family.
He said it was Hebert Ohene Donkor who later became Nana
Yeboah Akwatia II who had given the land to the government but insisted the
land was not donated.
Interestingly, another group led by Nana Apiadu
Bediako who is the Sanaahene of Aburi has commissioned a consultant to chase
compensation for him in respect of the same land in 2013.
In the ensuing confusion, Kwesi K. Bentsi-Enchil
Chief Valuer in charge of compensation at the Lands Commission appeared to set
the records straight when he testified.
He said numerous correspondences between Nana Yeboah
Akwatia II and the Regional Lands Commission in Koforidua as well as the
school’s authorities appeared to indicated that the land was donated by H.O.
Donkor on behalf of the family.
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