More than 200 Project Affected Persons (PAP) on the Suhum-Nsawam and
Madina-Pantang roads yesterday besieged the offices of the Controller
and Accountant-Generals Department (CAGD) to demand their money.
The action renewed a five-year protracted battle between the PAPs on the two projects and the government.
An
assurance from the Deputy Controller and Accountant-General in charge
of Finance and Administration, Mr Kwasi Owusu, that the money would be
ready Friday, at the Bank of Ghana (BoG) did not assuage the anger and
frustration of the people, who retorted in Twi, a local dialect that
they will not go and that they want their money or they will sleep at
the offices of the CAGD.
The warrant
Two
weeks ago, the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning (MoFEP) gave
the representatives of the PAP, a warrant to be cleared at the CAGD, but
the two groups are yet to receive the cheques, which they said had
become a great source of worry to them.
The MoFEP issued two
separate warrants; GH¢23, 11,449 for those on the Suhum-Nsawam Road, and
GH¢8,598,676 to their counterparts on the Madina-Pantang stretch
totalling of GH¢31.7m.
The money, which has been outstanding since
2005, will be paid to property owners whose structures were demolished
during the construction of the Accra-Kumasi Highway Lot 6:
Kwafokrom-Apedwa and the Tetteh Quarshie-Mamfe and the Madina-Pantang
roads.
The affected people include landlords, chop bar operators,
mechanics, farmers, welders and electricians whose properties were
demolished to pave the way for the construction of the two major roads.
'Since
the warrant was handed to us, we have been shuttling between our homes
and the department, and it appears they are playing some tricks which we
do not understand', the spokesman for the group, Mr Owusu Dome, stated
in an interview with the Daily Graphic.
According to him, they had
already waited five years to get the warrant for the payment. It was,
therefore, unfair that after about two weeks, they had still not
received their money.
The next action
Mr
Dome who had been elated after receiving the warrant two weeks ago
threatened a blockage of the main Suhum-Nsawam highway, a major road
that leads to Kumasi, the Ashanti Regional capital.
'We have made
that intention known at today's meeting with officials of the department
and we pray that they keep to their promise', he stated.
'We have
been asked to go to the Ghana Highway Authority (GHA) tomorrow to
follow up. If by Monday, we don't get our money, we will carry out the
threat', he stated.
Mr Dome's sawmill at Suhum was cleared during
the road construction and he had been waiting for the money to revive
the business and also to go into commercial agriculture.
Dailygraphic
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