Audio By Carbonatix
Secretary of the Board of Trustees for the National Cathedral Project, Reverend Kusi Boateng, says he’s hopeful the National Cathedral is going to be completed in three years.
Although actual construction is yet to begin on the site, the Reverend stated that the Covid-19 pandemic was to be blamed for the 9-month delay, as the construction firm that won the bid to construct the Cathedral could not travel due to the restrictions.
However, following the easing of travel restrictions, he indicated that they currently in town and construction will begin soon.
Speaking on JoyNews’ The Pulse, Wednesday, he said, “This construction, if I’m to tell you how it is, it’s not any regular construction that anybody can just do. One of the biggest construction firms in Italy that did the grand mosque of Abu Dhabi is the Rivani Construction Company. It’s the lead construction company who built a JV with Barbisotti and Sons.
“Obviously with the Covid, it was impossible for the winners as the contractors to have flown in to come and start any kind of a job. So with the Covid, obviously things were happening but there was no way things could have begun because the people that won the bid could not come to Ghana to work. So it was the Covid that slowed us down, but we’ve crossed that boundary and we have them in town, work has started and things are moving.”
He also clarified that the apparent slow pace of the construction of the National Cathedral was due to the restrictions the Covid-19 pandemic had presented and not on financial challenges as some had purported.
Reverend Boateng stated that now that the challenge had been taken care of with the arrival of the Rivani contractors, construction will begin expediently, projecting that the Cathedral would be completed in 3 years.
“The main issue why the project had not started was not money because we have people that have supported us, we have people that are still supporting us and the government is also in the process of supporting us, so money is not the issue. But Covid and the challenges of appointing the contractor and all those things were the things that delayed us but now we’re really on course. The cathedral will be built.
“Basically it was three and a half years to four years but now we’re going to do it in a record three years. If not less,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
André Ayew: Should he make Ghana’s 2026 World Cup squad?
27 minutes -
Ghana is not for rent – Accra warns world powers amidst EU-Ghana defence pact
38 minutes -
Narcotics Control Commission opens applications for cannabis cultivation and management licences
43 minutes -
PAC Chair Abena Osei-Asare to recuse herself from GH¢68.7bn audit probe — PAC Member
53 minutes -
Carney inches closer to majority, as fourth MP defects to Liberals
56 minutes -
Gov’t condemns drone incident near Dubai airport that injured two Ghanaians
60 minutes -
GH¢68.7bn audit irregularities deliberate, not administrative lapses — Crime Analyst
1 hour -
Ablakwa reveals Ghana’s role in US-Nigeria Christmas Day strikes on ISIS targets
1 hour -
Iran cannot participate in FIFA World Cup, sports minister says
1 hour -
CSOs engage Parliament to strengthen anti-corruption efforts
1 hour -
Redefining Leadership: Pearl Nkrumah’s story of resilience and impact
1 hour -
Agyemang-Manu was arrested over Sputnik V vaccine deal, he’ll face charges — Kwakye Ofosu
2 hours -
FDA investigates alleged use of plastic in frying plantain chips
2 hours -
Yango Ghana marks IWD 2026 with empowering chit-chat, gifts for female partners and couriers
2 hours -
PAC to probe GH¢68.7bn audit irregularities thoroughly — Akwasi Konadu assures
2 hours
