
Audio By Carbonatix
The situation at the “Mile Eleven" cemetery off the Kasoa-Winneba road where decomposed bodies were reportedly exposed due to Monday morning's downpour has been given a new twist.Reacting to the story, the Metropolitan Public Health Director of the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA), Dr Simpson Anim Boateng, contended that the incident was a deliberate action by members of the community to demonstrate their disapproval of mass burial of corpses there.He said investigations by his department on Tuesday revealed that the grave was dug by the residents whom he had, in the past accused of illegally building there.According to him, the residents had encroached on the land meant for the cemetery.Dr Boateng told the Times in an interview that the government in the 1970s acquired 0ver 200 acres of land there for the purpose of burials but the encroachment had left less than only four acres for mass burial.“These people acquired the land from the chief in the area and are staying there at the risk of their health because most of the people buried there died of highly contagious diseases," he stated,Dr Boateng, who sounded frustrated, said his department had on numerous occasions advised people against the practice."Honestly speaking, national security will have to come in because the situation is beyond me now and the whole township is built on cemeteries, although no single resident can show a permit allowing him or her to build there," he complained.He said because of the encroachment, only a small piece of land was left for mass burial and that often resulted in digging and exposing of skeletal parts in the process because of the very limited space.His frustration found further expressing in his complaint that a lot of very influential people in the society had acquired lands there thus making AMA's efforts to bring back sanity to the area very difficult.Meanwhile, Dr Boateng has led a team to the cemetery to dig a new grave for the reburial of the corpses.The entire area has also been fumigated.An official at the Environmental Protection Agency told the Times that they could only make a public statement after they had visited the place.Source: The Ghanaian Times
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
-
Gov’t orders deployment of Metro Mass buses to cushion commuters amid fuel price hike
10 seconds -
Key Indian state polls begin in test for Modi’s party
7 minutes -
Gomoa Easter Carnival in photos
14 minutes -
Gov’t orders removal of fuel taxes to ease pump price hikes
19 minutes -
“Whatever the decision of CAS, we will respect it” – CAF President Motsepe after AFCON final meetings in Morocco
36 minutes -
Emma Ankrah: When waiting becomes part of treatment – Reflections on hospital care
39 minutes -
Ghana urges travellers to prepare for new EU border system roll-out
49 minutes -
Mahama enforces fuel coupon ban for ministers as cabinet moves to slash fuel taxes
53 minutes -
Task force probes strange fish deaths in Tema
56 minutes -
Neglected traffic lights turn Awoshie–Anyaa highway into deadly hotspot
1 hour -
EOCO declares Dr Gabriel Tanko Kwamigah-Atokple a fugitive over alleged gold fraud
1 hour -
GSE records GH¢1.09bn trade in equity market; 10 stocks register gains
2 hours -
Fuel prices: Ghana places 15th in Africa
2 hours -
Africa must look inward: Reframing resilience in a shifting global economy
2 hours -
9 dead, 2 missing after boat capsizes on Volta Lake
2 hours