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UNDP hands over solar-mechanised garden to women in Yipala

 One hundred women house­hold heads in the Yipala commu­nity of the West Gonja Municipal­ity in the Savannah Region have re­ceived a three-acre solar-mechanised dry season garden to enhance food production and improve livelihoods.

The facility, funded by Denmark and Luxembourg, was handed over by the United Nations Develop­ment Programme (UNDP) in partnership with the Movement of Rural Entrepreneurial Women (MORE-Women). It will provide irrigated farmland and clean water, enabling year-round farming for beneficiaries.

At the ceremony yesterday, Ms Jennifer Asuako, UNDP Pro­gramme Analyst for Gender and Human Rights, highlighted the critical role women play in support­ing households and communities de­spite barriers such as limited access to land, finance, and technology.

She said the solar-mechanised sys­tem was designed to ensure reliable income opportunities for women through all-season farming. Beyond Yipala, a similar facility has also been established in Suke in the Lambussie District of the Upper West Region to boost agricultural productivity and strengthen value chains.

According to her, the initiative forms part of a broader UNDP project implemented with partners, including the Savannah Regional Peace Council and MORE-Women.

The programme promotes inclusive governance, communi­ty-led peace-building, and economic empowerment, while addressing conflict drivers in northern Gha­na by advancing gender equality, socio-economic opportunities, and women’s participation in peace and decision-making.

She added that such interventions also reduce the risks of radicalisa­tion and violent extremism in the subregion.

Mr Sixtus Akanzige Nsoh, Pro­gramme Manager of MORE-Wom­en, speaking on behalf of the Executive Director, said the project, Boosting Women’s Economic Resilience and Inclusion in Deci­sion-Making and Peacebuilding in Ghana, has been running in Yipala for the past six months and is al­ready yielding results.

He listed some achievements, in­cluding fenced farmland, boreholes, improved seeds and inputs for 100 women farmers; training in financial literacy and entrepreneurship; access to credit facilities through Vision Fund and Kintampo Rural Bank; and the creation of two Village Savings and Loans Associations with $1,000 seed capital.

Mr Nsoh also revealed that a Women’s Peace Dialogue Platform has been established, facilitat­ing structured dialogue between farmers and Fulani herders, while many women are already applying climate-smart farming techniques introduced by the Ghana Meteoro­logical Agency (GMet).

Representing the Chief of Yipala, Mr Ali Suleimana commended UNDP and MORE-Women for the intervention.

He said the project would help women provide for their families during the dry season, while the water facility would also relieve chil­dren of the burden of walking long distances for water during school hours.

FROM GEOFFREY BUTA, YIPALA

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