Audio By Carbonatix
Individuals living in the coastal town of Butre in the Western Region are calling on government to fix the main bridge which links the community.
The almost eighty-meter wooden footbridge which was constructed 10 years ago now looks weak and dangerous.
Butre, a community which doubles as a tourist site, has seen the bridge becoming a bane to the progress of it as several tourists are scared to use the bridge.
Whenever the bridge collapses, it cuts off the link between Butre and other communities. According to residents, when the bridge collapsed last year, it took the life of a seven-year-old boy.
Residents, including children, are scared to use the bridge but have no option as it is the only route to other communities and their beaches.
“We are frightened whenever we use the bridge because my colleague lost his life last year and I am pleading with the government to fix the bridge for us.” Elizabeth, a class six pupil told JoyNews.
According to elders in the community, three people have lost their lives on the bridge and about a dozen of them injured.
The community’s spokesperson spoke to JoyNews, “about four people have lost their lives and several others have sustained various injuries all before my eyesight.”
Peter, a tour guide lamented how the state of the bridge is affecting revenue and “the tourists are all scared because of the bridge and it is really affecting me because in 2018 I used to embark on 20 canoe trips but in 2019, I really struggled for more trips.”
Tourist sites are paying the hard price as they could not cash in during the Year of Return due to bad roads and the bridge.
Francis, a manager of one of the resorts in the community stated, “the bridge has been nicknamed the dancing bridge because the bridge shakes whenever they use it, so people are scared to use it and one other factor is the poor nature of the road, which is why a lot of tourists have not visited.”
Some tourists who spoke to JoyNews reporter, Henry Kwesi Badu said “we came across the bridge last midnight and we found it precarious but I think it’s worse using it during the day because you get to see how fragile and wobbly it is.” Another lamented: “I was so scared, I even had my menses even though it wasn’t my time yet.”
Butre is a small fishing village located on a sheltered bay near a forest between the communities of Busua and Asemkaw, about 20 kilometres southwest of Takoradi. Now home to nearly 400 inhabitants, largely from the Ahanta ethnic group, Butre was among the early historical towns generated by 17th-century inter-European and inter-African conflict.
Latest Stories
-
Gov’t is losing the case against Wontumi – NPP’s Awal Mohammed
13 minutes -
George Addo Jnr returns as lead english commentator for official AFCON broadcast rights holders
41 minutes -
Nigerian aircraft and crew detained by Burkina Faso released
46 minutes -
Bright Simons rises as key figure in evidence-driven public policy in Africa
49 minutes -
Seven arrested in Cape Coast anti-drug swoop, Police seize narcotics and gaming machines
54 minutes -
From fever to football: Lessons on celebrity culture and child development
1 hour -
CSOs acting as lobbyists, not public watchdogs – NPP’s Awal Mohammed
2 hours -
Ghanaian soldiers touch down in Jamaica to support Hurricane Melissa recovery efforts
2 hours -
Police arrest 4, seize drugs and illegal gaming machines in Paga operation
2 hours -
Former deputy A-G says 1931 extradition treaty with US is outdated
2 hours -
Any prosecutor who files 78 charges is not serious — Kofi Bentil on Ofori‑Atta Case
2 hours -
CPP’s Ghanamannti slams L.I. revocation on illegal mining
2 hours -
Prosecution strategy against Ofori-Atta likely to fail – Kofi Bentil
2 hours -
It will be a small miracle to extradite Ken Ofori-Atta — Kofi Bentil
2 hours -
Ofori-Atta could claim political bias in extradition proceedings — Prof. Appiagyei-Atua
2 hours
