Audio By Carbonatix
A security analyst has proposed the relocation of the residents of a slum-like area at Agbogbloshie in Accra which has been the site of ethnic clashes over the years.
Wing Commander Patrick Nene Sogbodzor says if the settlers are relocated to different parts of the city, it would greatly reduce the influence of political, economic and ethnic factors that have incited the attacks and loss of lives.
He said although there are political influences in the clashes between the Konkombas and the Dagombas, the overriding influence has been ethnic and chieftaincy related.
“One has to go into history to find why there is no peace between them [Konkombas and Dagombas],” he said, tracing the perennial clashes to factional differences that have existed since the time of Ghana’s first President, Kwame Nkrumah.

Patrick Nene Sogbodzor spoke on current affairs programme, PM Express on the Joy News Channel on Multi TV.
Mr Sorgbodzor’s comments follow Tuesday’s bloody clashes between the two ethnic groups that claimed at least two lives and injured scores.
Details of the cause of the clash are sketchy, but eyewitnesses attribute it to an old political and ethnic rivalry between members of the two tribes.
Clashes in April 2015 between Dagombas and Zabarima traders also left four people including a police officer injured. A clash in November 2014 left two people dead.
Meanwhile, there is a heavy deployment of police and military personnel at the market area to forestall further clashes.

The Police are still looking the actual trigger of the latest clashes.
The security analyst is convinced relocation of the residents, who are predominantly yam traders at the Agbogbloshie market, or the total destruction of the slum area would bring peace.
He also cited poor intelligence gathering for by the police for yesterday's clashes and called for adequate allocation resources to the security forces to enable them to quickly quell disagreements that degenerate into fatal clashes.
Watch the full programme in the video link below:
Latest Stories
-
Gone too soon: Top facts about Berekum Chelsea forward Dominic Frimpong
3 minutes -
Oil, war and the limits of monetary policy
22 minutes -
GFA calls for justice after death of Berekum Chelsea forward Frimpong
28 minutes -
Finance Minister leads Ghana’s delegation to 2026 IMF/World Bank Spring Meetings
28 minutes -
Today’s front pages: Monday, April 13, 2026
30 minutes -
Eugene Zuta Ministries ties new album project ‘Songs of the Redeemed’ to education support for 50 children
31 minutes -
African banks could be affected in prolonged Iran war; central banks may tighten policy rate – Fitch
33 minutes -
Ghana to honour astronaut Christina Koch with University of Ghana ties after Artemis II mission
40 minutes -
The Pulse of accountability: Navigating medical negligence in Ghana, as an emerging challenge in healthcare.
45 minutes -
Borders by Design: How the world controls who moves and who stays
51 minutes -
A LinkedIn message, a Dublin defender, and a nation’s first World Cup qualification
1 hour -
UNFPA Ghana recognised with Head of State award
1 hour -
Berekum Chelsea winger Dominic Frimpong dies after armed robbery attack on team bus
1 hour -
Armed robbers attack Berekum Chelsea team bus, forward Frimpong killed
2 hours -
FIFA refuses Iran request to move games to Mexico amid US conflict
2 hours