Audio By Carbonatix
The government of Ghana has decided to fully complete the University of Ghana Stadium to complement facilities which would be built at Borteyman for the 2023 African Games, Youth and Sports Minister, Mustapha Ussif has revealed.
Responding to an urgent question in Parliament on Wednesday, the Sports Minister announced that due to delays in starting the construction of a proposed 50,000 Olympic size Stadium in Borteyman for the Games as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, it has become apparent that the full stadium may not be completed on time, hence the decision by the government to resort to an alternative means having the facilities available for the games.
In what the Minister described as a phase approach, government will now focus completing the University of Ghana stadium at Legon, and also building the olympic stadium in Borteyman in phases by prioritising the urgent construction of facilities which the University of Ghana stadium doesn't have
"After careful study of timelines, the Ministry in consultation with the LOC have decided to adopt a hybrid approach to construct the project in phases by leveraging on existing facilities at the University of Ghana and build the other facilities that are not available but are requirements for the hosting of the Games," Mustapha Ussif said in Parliament.
According to the Minister, the refurbishment of the University of Ghana Stadium will include the resurfacing of existing athletics tracks and the construction of a new athletics warm-up running tracks.
At Borteyman, the following facilities will be constructed for the Games: one thousand (1,000) seater competition swimming pool, i.e. 8-lane competition swimming pool, 8-lane warm-up swimming pool, 500-seater temporary dome (handball, judo, karate, taekwondo, wrestling, basketball, etc), and 1,000-seater multi-purpose hall (badminton, boxing, volleyball weightlifting, parasports).
Other facilities to be constructed are; 1,000-seater multi-purpose hall (basketball, table tennis, wrestling), five (5) tennis courts complexes, including one thousand (1,000) seater centre court (covered spectator stand) with a 20 capacity VVIP viewing seats).
The other four (4) courts would each have a two hundred (200) spectator seats.
The Minister, who gave parliament a detailed background and timelines of how Ghana won the bid to host the Africa Games, also spoke at length about how the global pandemic has affected Ghana's preparations.
Nonetheless, the Minister assured Parliament of Ghana's commitment and ability to stage a successful competition.
Ghana won the bid to host the African Games ahead of countries such as Egypt and Burkina Faso.
Latest Stories
-
How a new who declaration could change traditional medicine
1 hour -
Evidence shows Ghana needs an independent prosecutorial system – Prof H. Kwasi Prempeh
1 hour -
Selective justice is destroying trust in Ghana’s anti-corruption system – Prof H. Kwasi Prempeh
2 hours -
Politician Attorney General model is broken and no longer credible – Constitution Review Chair
2 hours -
Indonesians raise white flags as anger grows over slow flood aid
3 hours -
Why passport stamps may be a thing of the past
3 hours -
Pope Leo urges ‘courage’ to end Ukraine war in first Christmas address
3 hours -
Commentary on Noah Adamtey v Attorney General: A constitutional challenge to Office of Special Prosecutor
3 hours -
Ghana’s democratic debate is too insular and afraid of change – Constitution Review Chair
3 hours -
24/7 campaigning is a choice, not democracy – Constitution Review Chair
4 hours -
4 years is too short as Ghana lags behind global democratic standards – Constitution Review Chair
4 hours -
GOLDBOD CEO explains ‘Clear Typo’ in Foreign Reserves claim
6 hours -
Trump says US military struck ISIS terrorists in Nigeria
6 hours -
Asake ‘devastated’ after fan dies during Kenya concert
8 hours -
Players can only leave if replacements come in – Amorim
8 hours
