
Audio By Carbonatix
The Chairman of Parliament’s Health Committee, Dr. Mark Kurt Nawaane, has described the operations of medical drone delivery company Zipline in Ghana as unnecessary and a mistake.
Addressing journalists on Thursday, December 4, he argued that the fundamental challenge facing health facilities is the lack of voluntary blood donors, not transportation constraints as previously suggested by former Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, under whose leadership Zipline was introduced.
“Zipline's presence in this country is a mistake. I'm not being political. It was the brainchild of his Excellency, the former Vice President, Dr. Bawumia,” he said.
“He wrongly diagnosed the problem in Ghana… everybody in the health sector knows that the problem of blood and blood products is not the transportation of these products.”
Dr. Nawaane explained that the main barrier to blood availability remains the shortage of voluntary donors, which compels families, churches and communities to be called upon when patients urgently need blood.
He maintained that if health facilities were adequately equipped with cold rooms and blood storage capacity, they would be able to supply blood when needed without relying on drone delivery.
“The amount of money that we spend on Zipline every month is $528,000,” he stated.
“If for the past five years we wanted to establish cold rooms in all district hospitals and health centres using this amount of money, we should have been able to do it.”
The Health Committee Chair also appealed to medical superintendents to use part of their Internally Generated Funds (IGF) to secure decent accommodation for newly posted medical officers, stressing that housing is often the first concern for doctors reporting to new duty stations.
“What doctors usually look for when they go to any place is accommodation… a decent and safe accommodation,” he said.
“I urge all medical superintendents, please, as I fight for your IGFs to be released to you, use part of it to rent decent accommodations for your incoming doctors and other health professionals.”
Latest Stories
-
Top Boy actor Micheal Ward raped woman in car, court told
32 minutes -
Michael Jackson movie becomes highest-grossing biopic of all time
40 minutes -
Nollywood actor, Hanks Anuku breaks silence after viral Abuja video
49 minutes -
I quit acting because pay was nonsense – Deyemi Okanlawon
57 minutes -
Lethal Weapon actor Danny Glover reveals Alzheimer’s diagnosis
1 hour -
US, Iran talks conclude in Doha, focused on Strait of Hormuz
1 hour -
German prosecutors arrest man accused of ordering killings during Rwanda genocide
1 hour -
World Bank backs Nigeria 2026–2032 plan with $1.25 billion to spur jobs, private investment
2 hours -
South African manufacturing sentiment worsens in June, Absa PMI shows
2 hours -
Oil falls for a third straight day after US, Iran talks conclude in Doha
2 hours -
World Bank approves Morocco clean energy project after ending climate lending target
2 hours -
Balogun scores and is sent off as US reach last 16
2 hours -
Government begins process to bring home Ghanaian killed in South Africa
2 hours -
We expect urgent action – Ghana presses AU over xenophobic attacks after citizen killed in South Africa
3 hours -
OpenAI proposes handing Trump administration 5% stake, FT reports
3 hours