The Yendi Municipal Assembly says it has recently prosecuted seven people for engaging in open defecation.
They were made to pay a fine of GH₵600 each for their actions, which were offensive and against the Assembly’s bye-laws on open defecation prohibition.
The Yendi Municipal Chief Executive (MCE), Alhaji Hammed Abubakar Yussif said as the Assembly was having a discussion on GBC’s local Naya Radio, there was a phone call to the station that some people were “doing it just behind the radio station.”
“A team was organised and the seven people were arrested and prosecuted.”
“We’ll prosecute more of such,” he said and warned against the practice which was a threat to the environment.
Open defecation is the human practice of defecating outside—in the open.
In lieu of toilets, people use fields, bushes, forests, open bodies of water or other open spaces when nature calls.
The practice is common where sanitation infrastructure is not available.
About 892 million people, or 12 per cent of the global population, practice open defecation.
The last Population and Housing Census by the Ghana Statistical Service indicates that about 17.7 per cent of Ghana’s households practice open defecation.
In an interview with the Ghana News Agency in Accra, Alhaji Yussif said the Assembly, from June 2023 onwards, would intensify the prosecution of offenders.
The interview was on the sidelines of the second multi-stakeholder dialogue on WASH, dubbed: “Executive Breakfast Conversation.”
It was on the theme: “Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies and Sustainable WASH Service Delivery,” with the sub-theme; “Every Child Deserves Clean Water and Improved Sanitation.”
It was organised by the Ghana Chapter of World Vision International, a Christian humanitarian organisation, the Ministry of Sanitation and Water Resources, and the United States Agency for International Development, among other partners.
The Yendi MCE announced that the Assembly had put in place a programme to help households construct toilet facilities.
He said the materials for the work and the men are ready for the construction within a week after discussions with the Assembly.
Latest Stories
-
Fidelity Bank launches ‘Wheels and Homes Expo 2025,’ bridging gap to home and car ownership
5 minutes -
OSP vs Ofori-Atta: Former Kufuor advisor shoots down political colourisation debate
15 minutes -
Commissioner of Insurance charges insurers to champion informal sector products
17 minutes -
U.S. visa is a privilege, not a right – Embassy in Ghana
29 minutes -
Big Chef S4: Rena bids her brother, Jaden, goodbye; Serwaa clinches 2nd Star Chef title
37 minutes -
Train Africa’s teachers in AI – or risk an education crisis
41 minutes -
TVET holds key to tackling youth unemployment and driving development – Mine Contractors’ Secretary
47 minutes -
Macroeconomic Stability at Last? An Odyssey of The Economic Upheavals in The 4th Republic and The GoldBod Experiment
58 minutes -
Breaking U.S. laws can lead to deportation, future bans – Embassy in Ghana warns visa holders
60 minutes -
Cape Coast Assembly begins demolition of unsafe buildings following fatal collapse
1 hour -
Rapper Fat Joe accused of sex with minors in $20m lawsuit by former hypeman
1 hour -
Heifer International announces winners at AYuTe NextGen 2025: Youth-led innovations set to transform Africa’s agriculture
1 hour -
Fisheries Ministry announces 2025 closed season
1 hour -
Reality of critical patient care when nurses and midwives withdraw services
1 hour -
Ghana to vaccinate 2.2 million girls against Human Papillomavirus (HPV)
1 hour