Audio By Carbonatix
The National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO) in the Ashanti region is on a mission to prevent a full-blown flooding situation as they embark on a major de-silting exercise in at least 17 drains in the Greater Kumasi metropolis.
The exercise comes after floodwaters inundated homes and some shops in recent downpours in parts of the city.
Many drainage systems in the Greater Kumasi metropolis are heavily choked with sand debris and filth from households and commercial activities.
The situation poses a precarious risk to communities along these drains with imminent threats of flooding.
The Pelele stream around the Kumasi Airport in the Dichemso enclave is one of the many streams which has always been at the mercy of the environmental menace.
The Ashanti regional NADMO office is embarking on a 12-day de-silting exercise in major drains within the Greater Kumasi Metropolis.

They include Airport, Buokrom South Africa, Mossie Zongo/Yenyawoso, Duase-Kenyase, Aboabo Pelele, Asabe-Buobai, Parkoso Estates, Sawaba/Affordable housing, Anloga Junction, Oforikrom and the Family Chapel area.
Others include the Kaase, Atonsu market-High School (Wewe river), Ahinsan Ambassadorial Area (Wewe river), Suame Kotoko, Breman UGC, Kronom Abuahia/Owabi and the Attafua Bridge on the Barekese Road.
“We are doing this to prevent the water from overflowing onto the roads and blocking access. We want to clear the sand debris to ensure the water flows freely in the drains. This is not our job, but as an organisation tasked to prevent any disaster, we are de-silting these drains,” Ashanti Regional NADMO Director, Alhaji Mohammed Nasir Ibrahim, said.
For years, residents living along these waterways have demanded an expansion of the narrow culverts underneath bridges over these drains.
The regional NADMO is adding to calls for the bridge elevation and the construction of concrete slabs on the shoulders and floors of the drains.
“We must construct a concrete floor and a 200-m concrete envelope on the shoulders of the drains so that once it rains, the water doesn’t hit back and flood homes,” he said.
As private individuals continue to build on waterways, NADMO stated that it will, in the coming days, launch an exercise on structures erected in wetlands.
Latest Stories
-
Trump media firm to issue new cryptocurrency to shareholders
1 minute -
Police restore calm after swoop that resulted in one death at Aboso
16 minutes -
Bawumia calls for NPP unity ahead of 2028 elections
24 minutes -
Fifi Kwetey brands calls for Mahama third term as ‘sycophancy’
35 minutes -
‘Ghana’s democracy must never be sacrificed for short-term politics’ – Bawumia
39 minutes -
Bawumia congratulates Mahama but warns he “cannot afford to fail Ghanaians”
40 minutes -
Ebo Noah arrested over failed Christmas apocalypse and public panic
1 hour -
CICM backs BoG’s microfinance sector reform programme; New Year Debt Recovery School comes off January-February 2026
2 hours -
GIPC Boss urges diaspora to invest remittances into productive ventures
2 hours -
Cedi ends 2025 as 4th best performing currency in Africa
2 hours -
Obaapa Fatimah Amoadu Foundation launches in Mankessim as 55 artisans graduate
3 hours -
Behold Thy Mother Foundation celebrates Christmas with aged mothers in Assin Manso
3 hours -
GHIMA reaffirms commitment to secured healthcare data
3 hours -
John Boadu pays courtesy call on former President Kufuor, seeks guidance on NPP revival
3 hours -
Emissions Levy had no impact on air pollution, research reveals
4 hours
