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March 29, 2006
Tema embark on walk to create awareness on dead
Chemu Lagoon
Article from
Ghana Today
Original URL:
http://www.ghanatoday.com/index.php?option=news&task=viewarticle&sid=16557
(Article is reprinted below, in case the original link is not available
in the future.)
Tema Manhean, Mar. 29, GNA- Natives of Tema, including
representatives of the chiefs and members of the Corporate Social
Responsibility Movement (CSRM), a Tema based non-governmental
organisation, on Tuesday embarked on a six-hour walk to create public
awareness about the death of the Chemu Lagoon.
It is perceived
that the industries have contributed largely to the death of the lagoon
through the discharge of effluent into it.
The protestors,
chanting traditional songs bore placards with the inscriptions like "our
farmlands now host industries", "Chemu Lagoon, our blood, we need it
alive", "our culture is going with industrialization", "we share the
risk, let us share the profit".
The walkers,
organized by the Tema Traditional Council (TTC) and the CSRM, converged
at the banks of the lagoon at Tema Manhean at 0730 hours and marched
around such factories such as the Pioneer Food Cannery, Volta Aluminium
Company, Unilever Ghana Limited, Tema Oil Refinery, PZ, Nestle Ghana
Limited.
The rest were
Cocoa Processing Company, GHACEM, Ferro Fabbrik Company and the Ghana
Ports and Harbours Authority where each factory was presented with a
petition.
They ended up
at the Tema Municipal Assembly where the leader, Mr Richster Nii Amarh
Amarfio, Executive Secretary of the CSRM, presented copies of petitions
to the Coordinating Director of the TMA, Mr George Scott for the
President and the Speaker of Parliament.
Mr Scott said
issues concerning the environment must be taken seriously. He expressed
the assembly's preparedness to support their efforts to ensure that that
companies alleged to have contributed to the death of the lagoon play
responsible role for its resuscitation.
Speaking to the
GNA later the Chief of Tema, Nii Adjei Kraku, said the Chemu Lagoon used
to be a source of livelihood for the natives but they have since 1960's
been deprived of this economic venture on the onset of industrialization
in Tema.
Nii Kraku said
they would continue to sit down with the management of the industries in
Tema to dialogue to see the need to contribute satisfactorily towards
the resuscitation of the lagoon.
Mr Amarfio said
the Acres International of Canada was consulted in 1996 to conduct
feasibility studies into the lagoon and submitted a report two years
later to the Environmental Protection Agency and the TMA but nothing
came out of it.
The petition to
the industries signed by Nii Kraku and Mr Amarfio read in part that the
chiefs, elders and the people of Tema have over the years co-existed
peacefully with all industrial interests and supported its smooth and
peaceful operations.
It said "it is
however sad to note that in spite of all these sacrifices, the same
cannot be said of treatment from the industrial sector".
The petition
said "it is no gainsaying that corporations have contributed
significantly to the fallen standards of the living of the people of
Tema and very little effort is being made in these directions".
"Currently, the
Chemu Lagoon is declared dead, basically because of industrial pollution
and very little commitment is seen from the side of industry in ensuring
its revival", it stated.
The petition to
the President and the Speaker of parliament called on them to redouble
their efforts to issue a white paper on the Acres report and get the
relevant agencies and bodies to act on it.
It saw the
resuscitation of both the Korle and Keta lagoons as discriminatory
against that of Chemu.
Source: GNA.
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