
Audio By Carbonatix
The Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) has warned the public not to patronize foods which are displayed on the ground or exposed to flies and dirt.“We would like to warn the general public to desist from patronizing unhygienic foods from our vendors,” Dr. Simpson A. Boateng, Metropolitan Public Health Officer of the AMA, warned.Dr Boateng told the GNA at the weekend that food safety was a priority of the AMA and food safety was a fundamental public health concern.He said these concerns were the result of effects of food-borne diseases like cholera, typhoid fever, pesticide poisoning through beans and vegetables, diarrhoea and food poisoning which further posed risks to health.Dr Boateng stressed that consumers “bought” diseases which they could not see with their bare eyes and later used their meagre resources for treatment.Research by the Food Research Institute showed that salads, re-heated soups and sauces, and dishes served with bare hands contained high levels of potentially dangerous bacteria.He reiterated that the AMA would intensify their education to enlighten the public on hazards associated with unhygienic foods.Dr Boateng said the problem rested on the attitude of the public, adding that in the course of educating them on food safety they tended to insult the officials.Mr William Lomo-Tettey, Assistant Chief Environmental Health Officer of the Food Safety Unit of AMA, said every food item which was for consumption must at least, be displaced on a table one-and-a-half meters above the ground.Mr Lomo-Tettey said the emerging food safety concerns called for effective collaboration with the Traditional Caterers Association, Food and Drugs Board, Ghana Standards Board, the Food Research Institute to train the sellers as well as market queens and educate the public on food safety.He said the AMA would use public announcement systems, drama and the electronic media to educate the public on behavioural change.Mr Lomo-Tettey urged food vendors to comply with this regulation of the AMA but if they proved adamant, they would be prosecuted.He advised the public to refrain from patronizing foods that were displaced on the ground to discourage the sellers and report those who were not complying with the regulation.He said the AMA would sanction officers who oversaw markets which had been assigned to them and vendors had not changed their bad attitudes and practices.Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Chinese bid for Atlantic Lithium puts Ghana’s local ownership model at Ewoyaa to the test
41 seconds -
Eight sentenced to 450 years in prison over anti-ICE riot where officer was shot
2 minutes -
Mrs Clarice Jobson-Mitchual nee Mccorquodale
7 minutes -
Eleven more bodies of migrants wash ashore from capsize last week off Libya
19 minutes -
Family of Zambia’s ex-leader should choose his burial site, SAfrica court says
28 minutes -
Attack kills 20 in Nigeria’s central Plateau attack
36 minutes -
Morocco target top spot in group ahead of Brazil
45 minutes -
Nigerian SEC orders halt to marketing for Dangote refinery IPO
56 minutes -
Oil extends slide on expectations of smoother crude flows via Hormuz
1 hour -
Libya’s eastern government bans entry of nationals from four African countries
1 hour -
Kenya signs $1.2bn deal with Chinese firm to expand Nairobi airport
1 hour -
US presses Meta to agree to AI reviews as security concerns rise, NYT reports
2 hours -
Unpaid bonuses and food issues – what’s going on inside Senegal camp?
2 hours -
Silly tackle, bad reaction – Tuchel defends Bellingham after Queiroz row
2 hours -
No extra revenue for FIFA from hydration breaks – Infantino
2 hours