Forced to rely on filthy water: Abutia Amegame residents plead for help
Recently, the United States Agency for International
Development (USAID) provided data
suggesting that, Ghana has made progress in safe water access at national level
with an improvement in water supply to 80 percent of the population. But
in the Ho West District of the Volta Region, a community is at risk to waterborne diseases as residents rely on a dirty pond for their water needs as
a result of poverty and neglect.
Abutia Amegame, a small
farming community, is one of the marginalised rural communities in the Ho
enclave of Ghana. It is ‘left behind’ in access to basic facilities
particularly clean water and healthcare.
As a contribution to the attainment of Sustainable
Development Goal 6, a borehole was constructed and handed over to the community
by the Rotary Foundation, the Rotary Clubs of Accra West, Ho and Rotary
Districts 5170, which brought joy and relief to the residents. However, in
2017, it broke-down and since then, the community has been unable to repair it
for use.
At
the time, the community needed only GHC1,240 for repair works on the
broken-down pipe/tap but could not provide it. Reports indicate that it was not
that the community did not make provisions for its maintenance but because a
bank failed to release money saved towards this project.
Information available
suggests that failure by Unity Rural Bank, a financial institution in the Volta
Regional capital, Ho, to refund savings of the WATSAN Committee of Abutia
Amegame is the reason the community is in its current situation.
Residents accuse Unity
Rural Bank, formerly Adaklu Rural Bank, of deliberately frustrating them and
failing to reimburse an amount of GHC1,297.75 which is the total of savings
deposited at the now defunct bank.
In an interview with some
of the community members, it was revealed that the WATSAN Committee opened an
account at Unity Rural Bank in 2016 to save money towards the maintenance of
the only borehole in Abutia Amegame.
However, when the
facility broke down in 2017, the community could not provide GHC1,240 for its
repair due to failure to retrieve their locked-up cash.
Ghanavi
can confirm that, several attempts by the community to withdraw their savings to
purchase the broken-down parts of the pipe since March 2017 have been
unsuccessful.
Despite the intervention
of the Ho West District Assembly, the collapsed bank has failed to pay back the
money. In a letter sighted by Ghanavi, the Ho West District Assembly
directed the Manager of Unity Rural Bank to allow the “WATSAN Committee to
withdraw this money immediately to undertake urgent repair work on the
borehole”.
See letter below:
This posture by the Bank
has compelled the community to solely depend on surface water and the rains to meet
their daily water needs. Since March 2017, the indigenes have been relying on a
pond of filthy water during the wet season and also trap rain water in pots and
barrels for use.
Madam Zomelo Margaret, a
concerned resident bemoaned the hardship the impending dry season would bring
on the community. According to her, the community is subjected to sufferings
when the only source of water, the pond dries up during the dry season. This
means that, indigenes including school children have to trek for long to
other villages to hunt for water.
“When our pipe got
spoilt, we planned to repair it so we invited an engineer who gave an estimate
of the parts we needed to the tune of about One Thousand Ghana Cedis. We’ve
tried to withdraw our savings from the bank but couldn’t so we’ve been fetching
some ground water down the hill,” Madam Zomelo Margaret narrates.
She stressed, “This is a
very worrying situation for us because during the dry season, we have to go to
Agbetikpo and other villages and sometimes, we pay drivers to transport water
from Kloe and Tegbleve for us to use. This distorts the education of our
children because, by the time we travel far to get water in the morning, they
get tired and have to be absent from school.
She appeals to charity
organisations, government, and philanthropists to come to their rescue as the
dry season draws near.
Watch the interview below:
“We’re suffering, especially
during the dry season. We have to run to other far villages for water and those
ones too are not good enough for humankind to use. It’s just a stagnant water.
We want the government and anybody who will see this video and be touched to
come and help us,” another resident, Albert Dogah reiterates the awkward
situation and calls for intervention.
A furious young man who
was carrying a ‘Kufuor gallon’ filled water vents his anger on politicians.
According to him, the politicians only come to deceive them for votes and after
the elections, they fail to fulfil their promises. He, therefore, threatened
that any politician who steps foot in the community to campaign in 2020 shall
be chased out.
“As you can see, we’re
suffering. The water we’re drinking isn’t healthy, it’s full of diseases. We’ve
made up our minds not to vote in the next elections. We have to go far down the
hill to fetch water from the ground so we’re pleading with you to help us
repair our pipe.
To support Abutia
Amegame, kindly contact the reporter via selormhelen@gmail.com or
+233265559202 for details or directions to the community.
Comments
Post a Comment