Audio By Carbonatix
The two boreholes dug by the Ghana Football Association (GFA) at the Sunyani Coronation Park are alleged to be shallow and have proven ineffective for purpose since its commissioning a year ago.
The water system is part of the Association’s Borehole project to ease access to water to the sports facility.
But the Bono Regional Director of the National Sports Authority, Foster Boakye, has revealed one of the boreholes at the Coronation Park is so shallow that when they pump for water, clay comes out, making it impossible to use in wetting the pitch.
FA President, Kurt E.S Okraku, commissioned three borehole projects in the region, including two at Coronation Park and one at the Sunyani Technical University.
It followed the decision of the Executive Council of the GFA to invest part of the Association's FIFA Forward 1.0 program to improve the quality of pitches and competitions via the provision of boreholes at game centres across the country.
The provision of boreholes is also ultimately improving competitions across the country with the Premier League, Division One League, Women’s Premier League and Regional Game centres having benefitted from the project.
But a year after the commissioning, the NSA boss in the Bono region says the project has not realized its ultimate goal.
“They gave us two boreholes, but unfortunately one of the boreholes was too shallow. Right now, they have connected the new dressing room to that borehole and that is what the players use to shower anytime they play matches. Before God and man, anytime we pump water it's more or less clay that comes out. How can we use such clay water to water the park, he quizzed. That’s why we channelled that borehole to the dressing room,” he said.
Foster Boakye said when he drew the attention of a member of the GFA’s Executive Council, he was told to resolve it on his own.
“I even spoke to one of the FA Exco members and pleaded with him that if it could be possible, they could even let the person come and do the drilling again so that the dirt or clay we see in the water will go down. I spoke to him and he said as for that one the NSA should take care of the cost. But my question is where is the NSA going to get the money from to do all those things?” he quizzed.
Meanwhile, the club licensing board of the GFA has revoked the license of the Sunyani Coronation Park with immediate effect for not meeting their requirements.
Latest Stories
-
Our ambition is to win the WAFCON – Kurt Okraku
1 minute -
IMF clarifies $214m figure as accounting cost, not GoldBod loss
5 minutes -
How Sedina Tamaklo misappropriated state funds leading to her 10-year jail term
15 minutes -
Community Police Assistant arrested over assault on patient at Assin Health Centre
30 minutes -
Connecting faith and music: Dennis Nii Noi’s impact on Ghana’s gospel scene
57 minutes -
CIB Ghana reinforces ethics, skills development as it charts 2026 growth
1 hour -
Ghana and Japan explore new investment opportunities at Accra B2B reception
1 hour -
Shatta Wale says he made $3m from music catalogue sale
1 hour -
APN launches logo design competition for “Make Africa Borderless Now!” campaign
1 hour -
Effective regulation and pricing frameworks of the NPA key to consistent fuel price reductions – Finance & Energy Analyst
1 hour -
UG SRC, GRASAG defend student levy increase to fund accommodation projects
2 hours -
Esther Smith refutes claims Pastor Elvis Agyemang charged for prayers
2 hours -
Seven canoes seized as Navy cracks down on fuel smuggling in Keta–Aflao
2 hours -
Energy Minister petitions IGP to probe alleged assault on ministry staff by police
2 hours -
African scientists propose Africa-led solutions to protect health research amid funding cuts
2 hours
