Editorial

Sissala, other areas need good roads

Residents of commu­nities along the Tumu- Sakai-Walembelle-Wa road in the Sissala East Municipality of the Upper West Region have expressed serious worries about the poor nature of the road and others in the area.

They have, therefore, appealed to the government to give the road a facelift to ease movement of people and goods.

Among other functions, roads help producers to send their products to markets, get workers to their workplaces, students to school, and the sick to hospitals.

That is to say roads are a vital resource that helps society to accomplish various endeavours.

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In a word, roads are vital to individual’s wellbeing and prog­ress with the aggregate effect positively impacting national development.

Because of the importance of roads to societal wellbeing, members of the society who find themselves deprived of or denied roads and good ones at that would not cease complaining about the situation.

Thus, the complaints of the people in the Sissala East Munic­ipality about the poor state of a principal road in their area must be of serious concern to the country’s managers.

Listening to the details of the complaints, one cannot but conclude that the poor nature of the Tumu-Sakai-Walembelle-Wa road in particular is hindering the movement of goods and services to where they are needed most, including marketing centres in neighbouring Burkina Faso.

This means efforts to ensure productivity in the area do not end as expected because if agri­cultural yields are not marketed, they go to waste and the implica­tions are dire economically, while the situation kills the morale of producers.

Similarly, it becomes very frus­trating if people cannot access places where their services are needed most all because of the lack of good roads.

It is pathetic to learn that the bad state of the roads in the Sissala area has made it nearly impossible for trucks, which cart large and heavy cargo, to access the roads there.

Meanwhile, residents are forced to rely on motorcycles for travels and tricycles (aboboyaa) to cart goods.

There are similar cases of poor roads across the country and there is one phenomenon about public projects and change of government, which must cease forthwith if the country must see even development.

If the narrative is true that the John Mahama administration awarded the Tumu-Sakai-Walem­belle road on contract to Fuzak Construction Company Limit­ed in 2015 but work came to a standstill after the Akufo-Addo administration took power, then this is bad and primitive.

However, the Ghanaian Times hopes President Akufo-Addo government’s District Road Im­provement Programme (DRIP) launched on July 30, 2024 would help right the wrongs in the road sector, including continuance of road projects even when there is a change in government at any time.

The DRIP is meant to facilitate the free movement of goods and services, enhance easy transpor­tation of farm produce to market areas and open new markets for farmers.

Just yesterday, the Municipal Chief Executive of Ketu South, Mr Maxwell Lugudor, said at Denu-Tokor in the Volta Region that the DRIP is not a political gimmick but a game-changer to transform Ghana.

It is the hope of every Gha­naian that so will it be because the country needs a good road network to boost development.

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