Communities in Anyako and its surroundings in the Keta Municipality are faced with acute water shortage over the past year following the collapse of the pumping machine that supplies the area.

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(ANYAKO) KETA : Water shortage hits Anyako

Communities in Anyako and its surroundings in the Keta Municipality are faced with acute water shortage over the past year following the collapse of the pumping machine that supplies the area.


Date Created : 10/21/2009 8:09:02 AM : Story Author : GhanaDistrict.Com

Communities in Anyako and its surroundings in the Keta Municipality are faced with acute water shortage over the past year following the collapse of the pumping machine that supplies the area.

Residents have therefore resulted to getting water from sources that pose a lot of health challenges to the people. Schools and health facilities are not left out of the situation and there are fears of a possible recurrence of cholera that hit the area last year.

The authorities alleged that the Ghana Water Company (GWC) and DANIDA had so far ignored appeals from the Keta Municipal Assembly to revive the facility.
   
This came to light when Mr Sylvester Tornyeava, Keta Municipal Chief Executive (MCE), visited Anyako as part of a familiarization tour of communities and public facilities in the area.
   
Mr Peter Dagbi, Keta Municipal Development Planning Officer, said the Anyako Water Station, which was built in 1967 and rehabilitated in 2000 was identified alongside a few others to be very profitable and was to be kept under the management of the GWC.
   
He said the Anyako Community, having a hint about the profitability of the station, seized the facility in a mob action in 2003 from the GWC against the advice of DANIDA.
   
Mr Dagbi said the two institutions therefore refused to have anything to do with the repairs when the station broke down.
   
Mr Tornyeava appealed to the GWC to rescind the decision, saying the entire community might not be behind the takeover and therefore all the people must not be made to suffer.
   
The MCE, inspecting a number of GETFUND projects at the ZION College at Anloga, decried the poor construction works on the completed 300 capacity girls’ dormitory and expressed the need for the contractor to be recalled to take a second look at the job.

DS