Audio By Carbonatix
The Dean of Graduate Studies at the Institute of Local Government says the lifting of restrictions on movement in the Covid-19 hotspots is timely and makes a lot of economic sense.
Dr Eric Oduro-Osae said the decision was based on data available to the President and the Covid-19 Response Team and, thus, entreated the public to exercise restraint in their criticisms.
Dr Oduro-Osae, however, underscored the need for the Information Minister, Mr Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, to provide further explanations and breakdown of what the lifting meant to the average Ghanaian.
"If you look at the public jubilations and what's happening in town now, it's like all the safety precautions have been relaxed, but we're not out of the woods yet," he noted.
Dr Oduro-Osae said this in an interview with the Ghana News Agency on Monday following the lifting of the three-week ban on the “stay home’ directive of Greater Accra, Tema, Kasoa and Greater Kumasi by the President effective Monday, April 20, at 0100 hours.
The reason for the ban lifting, the President said, was Ghana's ability to undertake aggressive contact tracing, enhanced testing, expansion of the number of treatment and isolation centres as well as the economic impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the poor and vulnerable in the affected areas.
Dr Oduro-Osae said there should be more public education on the implication of the lifting of restriction on movements whilst security personnel remained at the checkpoints to enforce the safety and social distancing directives.
The Local Government Expert urged the various metropolitan, municipal and district assemblies and Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development to enforce the social distancing and hygiene protocols at the various markets to avoid possible community spread of the virus.
"My greatest disappointment is the low arrest and prosecution of persons who breached the lockdown directives. I believe those who break such directives must be prosecuted to serve as a deterrent to others," Dr Oduro-Osae added.
Ghana's case count for COVID-19 now stands at 1,042 as at Sunday, April 19, with nine deaths and 99 persons fully recovering, after 68,591 test results were received.
Latest Stories
-
LPG’s Kofi Akpalu and others to be charged for alleged forgery and related offences – AG
9 minutes -
Karpowership engages reporters, reaffirms commitment to power supply and community impact
17 minutes -
From fear to empowerment: Dzifa Gunu’s mission to transform Ghana’s digital future
22 minutes -
Wontumi Farms, directors to face prosecution over GH₵24m alleged EXIM Bank loan fraud
28 minutes -
PAG demands answers on EOCO’s record GH¢337m recoveries
30 minutes -
AG: Gov’t will use surcharge and disallowance to recover mismanaged public funds
33 minutes -
Sarkodie recounts terrible ‘wee biscuit’ experience during US show
35 minutes -
1D1F: The policy that broke Ghana’s industrial summit
36 minutes -
GT Music Concert lights up Accra as Ghana and Nigeria’s stars share one stage
43 minutes -
Bawumia appeals to NPP delegates: ‘Vote for me on competence, track record and vision’
1 hour -
NDC supported establishment of Office of the Special Prosecutor – Samuel Jinapor
1 hour -
High Court bars investigative journalist from publishing on private individual, imposes GH¢10,000 cost
2 hours -
‘Inconsistent Vinicius Jnr not on Neymar’s level’ – ex Botafogo manager
2 hours -
T-bills: Government records 47% oversubscription; interest rates fall
2 hours -
OSP deserves a second chance; it must decentralise its operations
3 hours
