Audio By Carbonatix
The entire area of land known generally as Achimota lands was compulsorily acquired by the Gold Coast colonial government by certificates of title dated December 16, 1921, and May 17, 1927, under the Public Lands Ordinance of 1876 for the establishment of the Prince of Wales College (now Achimota School).
The land was acquired from the Owoo Family of Osu and compensation of £4000 was paid in connection therewith.
A section of the land was constituted into a forest reserve to provide among others, a buffer between the college and the city of Accra, and also to provide cheap fuelwood for the college. That is what is currently known as Achimota Forest Reserve, and comprised a much larger expanse than we have currently.
The current size of the forest reserve is approximately 360 hectares after it lost a sizeable swathe of 135 hectares of its original size to various projects including the establishment of the Greenhill campus (GIMPA).
By petitions dated August 14, 2006, and September 25, 2007, respectively and addressed to the President of the Republic, the Owoo family (pre-acquisition owners) prayed for the release of unused portions of the acquired land back to them.
By a letter dated September 11, 2013, the government through the Forestry Commission, approved the request of the Owoo Family’s repeated petitions and agreed to grant them a leasehold interest of 99 years in the peripheral areas of the forest amounting to 118 acres.
the government also has intentions of developing portions of the area into an ecotourism/green park through a public-private partnership.
Due to the zoning of the area as a forest reserve, the released portions cannot be used for purposes not in line with the zoning. This caused the Owoo family to apply for a rezoning of the area to make it suitable for the intended development purposes of its grantees.
The current notice is not a sale of Achimota forest reserve lands but rather, a notice that the area is no longer zoned as a Forest Reserve.
The actual “sale” if it is proper to refer to it as such, was done by the government as far back as September 2013 when government released parts of the land to the Owoo Family. What has been done now is only consequent upon the said release.
Before we jump on issues and sensationalise them, it is prudent that we take a minute to seek some minimum information. Government has not done anything wrong or untoward. At least not this government.
My ten cents!
Latest Stories
-
Ghana loses over GH¢4.5bn annually to traffic congestion, new study on urban mobility shows
9 minutes -
ADB unveils new corporate cloth, determines to dominate industry
17 minutes -
Peak Milk extends Ramadan support following courtesy visit to national Chief Imam
24 minutes -
No solo bid for Ken Agyapong — Joojo Rocky Obeng dismisses ‘third force’ calls as politically ridiculous
29 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Friday, February 13, 2026
1 hour -
5 arrested for open defecation at Osu Cemetery
1 hour -
A Home that Travels: How the Diaspora carries Pan-Africanism across borders
1 hour -
Obituary: Hon. Stanley Basil Bade Carboo
2 hours -
Government to absorb COCOBOD’s $150m losses as Cabinet directs immediate cocoa purchases – Finance Ministry
2 hours -
Mpraeso MP demands immediate probe and arrest over alleged exploitation of young Ghanaian women
2 hours -
‘No bed syndrome,’ and how a hit-and-run victim was refused emergency care by Ridge, Police, Korle Bu hospitals for close to 3 hours before he died
2 hours -
Give Love a second chance on Valentine’s Day – Counsellor Perfect
2 hours -
GSS generates the numbers that drive national development – Government Statistician Dr Iddrisu
3 hours -
We are not policy advisers, we generate the data – Government Statistician clarifies GSS’ role
3 hours -
Golden Jubilee Sports Festival opens with call for discipline, unity
4 hours
