About 600 residents of Tusungu and Kparia communities, both suburbs of the North Gonja District in the Savannah Region, have been displaced by a heavy rainstorm.
Although no casualty was recorded, people's homes and other personal and public properties were destroyed.
Many of the buildings' roofs have been ripped off, while foodstuffs and clothes among several other items were all damaged.
Victims from the Tusungu community said they were badly hit and not a single house was left unaffected.
They claimed the disaster, which occurred between the hours 8:00pm and 9:00pm, denied them their usual night rest following the severity of the storm.
At Tusungu, electricity supply to the community has been cut off after the storm destroyed electricity poles, cables and meters.
Some bags of grains, like maize, millet and sorghum, livestock and trees such as shea and Dawa Dawa were equally not spared.
"It occurred in the night and there was no sleep for us because all our rooms have collapsed and no food for us. The clothes that we managed to retrieve are not many because they are trapped inside. We need support from everybody and the government," one resident Amina Adams pleaded.
In recounting the incident, the Assembly Member for Tunsugu, Abukari Issah, said "it just came at once with thunderstorm strike and wind. As you can see from yourself there is no house in the community (Tusungu) that is not affected."
According to Mr Issah, the impact is very huge, requiring urgent support for the victims to survive.
He appealed to the government and NGOs and the public to intervene with any form of support to enable them house the affected victims in school structures.
While sympathizing with the victims, Member of Parliament of Daboya/Mankarigo, Asei Seni said he has tasked officials of the National Disaster Management Organisation, NADMO to conduct a proper assessment of the level of destruction to enable his office and the district assembly assist the victims.
"I sympathize with the chiefs and the people. NADMO will do a proper assessment and give a report and based on that report, we will be able to come up with what is needed."
"Whatever NADMO, the district assembly and I will gather, we must do that quickly to bring life back in the community. For now, I know the need for shelter, food and clothes and that's what we must work on," Mr Seni noted.
Latest Stories
-
Israel orders more evacuations as Rafah fighting intensifies
23 mins -
Connielove Dzodzegbe: The childless mother
3 hours -
Media houses must uphold high standards – Gyan Apenteng
4 hours -
Virginia university students walk out of graduation event
9 hours -
Energy Commission issued advisory on recent power interruptions in 2023
9 hours -
Ghana to lobby AU for intercontinental initiative on reparations – President
10 hours -
Dollarise Ghana’s economy to curb Cedi depreciation —Dr Kwakye suggests
10 hours -
Art Tech Institute launched to revolutionise jewelry education in Ghana
11 hours -
Mohammed Kudus’ solo strike against Freiburg wins West Ham Goal of the Season
11 hours -
MTN FA Cup: Nsoatreman beat Legon Cities to make first-ever final
12 hours -
MTN Ghana Foundation’s new maternity, NICU block brings joy to expectant and nursing mothers on Mother’s Day
13 hours -
Finance Minister urges GRA Customs Division to intensify revenue collection efforts
14 hours -
Work hard to exceed expectations – Finance Minister to Customs officials
14 hours -
World Bank and IMF can press Ghana to rethink ‘punitive’ LGBTQ law – CSOs, others
15 hours -
Ghana’s secondary education ranking misrepresented – MoE
15 hours