
Audio By Carbonatix
Dr. Seidu Al-hassan, a lecturer at the Wa Campus of the University for Development Studies, on Thursday said the only way the government could bridge the yawning development gap between the north and the south was through the exploration of international markets for commodities originating from northern Ghana.
He named some of the commodities and produce as sheanuts, groundnuts, beans and cotton, cloth weaving and Basketry, rearing of small ruminants and guinea fowls.
Dr. Al-hassan said this during a day's seminar on World Bank/International Monetary Fund and Development in Northern Ghana, organized by Network for Environment and Development- Africa (NEDA) at Wa.
He appealed to individuals, groups and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to develop special interest in the monitoring of development projects as their contributions towards the avoidance of waste.
"The bridging of that development gap between the north and south would never be achieved if the government continues to share the national cake equally, rather, the north needs a special development concession to catch up with the south."
Speaking on "The lending programmes of international financial institutions- prospects for Northern Ghana", Mr. Abudulai Dramani, an official of Third World Network-Africa, suggested to prominent northerners to strengthen their bargaining capacity and to negotiate with the government for a development concession that would help accelerate development in northern Ghana.
He said government should also consider the development of northern Ghana as a priority and a national issue devoid of ethnicity and sectional affiliations.
Mr. Dramani said although northern Ghana had all the prospects to develop, lack of political will and enthusiasm from northerners remained a stumbling block.
Mr. Fauster Agbenyo, lecturer at the Wa Campus of the University for Development Studies, appealed to the government to consider developing cloth weaving and basketry industries and to develop bee-keeping, guinea fowls and small ruminant farming to engage people from the north throughout the year, since they depended so much on rain-fed agriculture.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
-
‘We’ve become quite experienced in negativity’ – Liverpool’s Slot
2 hours -
Legendary manager Lucescu dies days after resigning
2 hours -
One dead as train travelling 99mph collides with lorry in France
2 hours -
Airlines cut flights and hike fares as fuel prices surge
3 hours -
Kane inspires Bayern to first-leg advantage over Real Madrid at Bernabéu
3 hours -
Wireless Festival cancelled after Kanye West blocked from coming to UK
3 hours -
Wa West MP commissions five boreholes for the benefit of his constituents
3 hours -
Havertz’s late strike hands Arsenal narrow first-leg advantage over Sporting
3 hours -
Damang mine award: Minority not against Ghanaian participation; we’re asking for fair process – Konadu
3 hours -
NPA to enforce stricter registration rules for petroleum tankers
4 hours -
Manhyia South MP laments decline in hospitality operations in his constituency
4 hours -
How a simple clean charcoal innovation could benefit Ghana’s climate future
4 hours -
NPA, COMAC launch Safety Week 2026 to promote risk management in petroleum sector
4 hours -
Stakeholder engagement resolves onion trade impasse
4 hours -
Gender Ministry holds staff durbar, welcomes new Chief Director
4 hours