Audio By Carbonatix
Over 1,800 students at Damongo Senior High School in the West Gonja Municipality of the Savannah Region are worried as the school is unable to provide them with enough food.
Some final year students who spoke to JoyNews stated that the shortage of food has worsened since May this year.
This has resulted in some students relocating from the boarding house and commuting from their homes to school for classes.
"Since we reported in May this year, it has been like this. No food, so, I complained to my father. He asked me to return home because I can't just be starving while there is food at home. So, for me and three of my colleagues, we eat from home. I think we should attend classes from home. If there is no quality can you talk about quantity", a student said.

"We all know there is no food on campus. Now, if we go to the dining hall like this, some will get while others will not. This started since we came to school in May this year. Even banku too, same. Seriously, they even reduced the quantity," another student added.
A male student also told JoyNews that, "The school called us and told us that it is not their fault. If we come and some don't get food, we should not be complaining and that we should all be managing. So, because of that, it is now first-come, first-serve. Because, if you are lucky and you get, fine if not you go back or you go home like those from Savannah Region".

A visit to the school on August 9, by Isaac Nongya during supper, confirmed what the students had earlier communicated.
Twenty students were seen sharing a pan of banku and okro soup. There was also groundnut soup.
Sources on campus said the situation got worse in August, due to some issues with the Ghana Buffer Stock Company.

A female food supplier explained that "there is a disparity between what buffer stock pays us and the actual market prices. Because buffer stock expects me to supply a bag of maize for the price of GH¢250 when in Tamale market, the same quantity for ready cash is GH¢350.
"So, one thing is clear, either buffer stock goes with the market price for maize or no deal because I can't buy at GH¢350 and come and give it to you for GH¢250. How much have I lost, GHC100."

Meanwhile, several efforts by JoyNews including follow-ups on both school management and the Municipal and Regional Directorate of GES for their responses on the subject have yielded no results.
Latest Stories
-
Lebanese general among three soldiers killed in Israeli attack on car
12 minutes -
US stocks slump as fears over Big Tech shake Wall Street
17 minutes -
‘It was either killed or be killed’ – ongoing nightmares of an ex-child soldier in Somalia
24 minutes -
Manhunt for suspects after 12 people shot near festival in Ohio
31 minutes -
Ntim Fordjour slams government over Anti-LGBTQ Bill, alleges ‘coordinated act of hypocrisy’
31 minutes -
Beyond prison feeding budgets: Turning a national challenge into a food security opportunity
2 hours -
Building collapses at North Industrial Area; two trapped as rescue efforts intensify
4 hours -
“We won’t be silenced!” — GJA boss exposes multi-million SLAPP suits targeting journalists
4 hours -
‘Free press is a pillar of governance, but fake news won’t be shielded’ – Sam George
5 hours -
Beyond access: The hidden dangers lurking in sanitary pads – A call for safer menstrual hygiene
5 hours -
Ibrahim Mahama, Telecel, and AirtelTigo step up for Ghanaian evacuees from South Africa – Ablakwa reveals
6 hours -
GJA honours JoyNews’ Samson Lardi Anyenini with Promotion of Press Freedom Award
6 hours -
Ablakwa vows to pursue compensation for destroyed Ghanaian businesses in South Africa
7 hours -
Multimedia Group COO Ken Ansah honoured by GJA with Media Development Award
7 hours -
“You are treasures, not miscreants!” — Ablakwa fiercely defends Ghanaians evacuated from South Africa
7 hours