Audio By Carbonatix
Students of Saint Francis College of Education have staged a demonstration through the main streets of Hohoe in protest against encroachment on the college's land by estate developers.
A petition signed by Mr Michael Sakpanyaku, the President of the Students' Representative Council, appealed to the government to stop the encroachment.
It said the encroachment was generating tension between students and developers and feared this could degenerate into clashes.
Mr Victor-Hermann Condobrey, the Hohoe Municipal Chief Executive who received the petition, pledged to forward it to the appropriate quarters for redress.
He said the land was dutifully acquired by the government 102 years ago but without payment of compensation and condemned the encroachment.
Mr Condobrey alleged that some present and former tutors as well as principals had acquired ownership of parcels of the land, making the issue multifaceted and demanding a more technical approach.
He advised the students to concentrate on their academic work, the fundamental reason for being in school while stakeholders tackle the problem.
Mr Condobrey commended the students for the peaceful nature of the demonstration and the creation of awareness on the matter.
Mr Denis M. K. Agbenuvor, Principal of the College, explained to the Ghana News Agency that the lands of the College were procured in 1905 and 1975.
He said 33.44 and 56.63 acres of land from five clans from the Gbi traditional area were released to the College.
They were the Ahorkli, Loh, Ayim, Ewou-Adjakwaku and Anyigba clans.
He said by the resolution of a Technical Committee of the Volta Regional Land Commission, 31 acres of the said land was released to the landowners after one Mr Dumevi petitioned it in October 2006.
Mr Agbenuvor said reasons adduced by the Committee were non-payment of compensation and resale of portions of the land by aggrieved landowners who were not aware of the acquisition.
He said 33 acres of land was given to the College to be regularised with its current infrastructure occupying additional 33 acres.
On the allegation of acquisition by staff, Mr Agbenuvor said there was no inventory taken on buyers of the College's lands but stated that new buildings continue to spring up.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana’s economy shows strong recovery after “inherited crisis” – Ato Forson tells Parliament
1 minute -
No further IMF financial bailout will be required in the foreseeable future – Finance Minister
2 minutes -
Learning from Ukraine, Hezbollah is now using fibre-optic drones to hit Israel
3 minutes -
Teenager arrested at Senya Beraku for alleged defilement of 15-year-old girl
3 minutes -
Ghana has moved from IMF ‘supplicant’ to partner – Ato Forson declares as economy surges past $100 Billion
5 minutes -
“Ghana has moved from ICU to wellness center” — Finance Minister declares economic recovery
27 minutes -
Ato Forson highlights “turning point” in economic recovery strategy
30 minutes -
NACSA Seminar: Gender Minister demands an increased role for women to end gun violence
36 minutes -
Full text: Statement on Ghana’s new engagement with IMF
42 minutes -
US trade mission to visit Ghana
1 hour -
Tempane: Three suspects arrested over deadly Worinyanga attacksÂ
1 hour -
EU fines Temu €200m for allowing sale of illegal products
1 hour -
Portugal breaks hottest May day record as Europe swelters in heatwave
1 hour -
KetaFC celebrates “vindication” after Volta RFA Middle League controversy
1 hour -
Professor Joseph Ofori-Dankwa receives 2026 Lifetime Leadership Impact Award
1 hour