Dr. Alfred Okoe Vanderpuije, Chief Executive of Accra Metropolitan
Assembly (AMA), has pledged that efforts would be made to transform
Accra into a modern city that could be able to meet challenges of
contemporary times.
The Accra Mayor said he would ensure that Accra had regular water and
electricity supply, clean environment and good roads, effective
drainage system and good private and public toilets.
Dr Vanderpuije was speaking at the first joint four-day meeting
between AMA and a delegation of the Earth Institute of the Columbia
University, to deliberate on how to develop Accra into a Millennium
city, which commenced in Accra on Saturday.
He said challenges were opportunities that could be turned into
benefits and profitable events and noted: “we live in the 21st Century
and we cannot deny our people development. AMA has a responsibility to
drive the edges and bring development to our people”
The Mayor told the delegation that Accra had problems including AMA’s
inability to manage solid and liquid waste and said: “it is so
embarrassing how liquid waste is disposed off in the country”.
Dr. Vanderpuije said this resulted in the malfunctioning of sewage
lines, constructed since Ghana’s Independence, which needed to be
replaced. He said AMA had a seven-point vision for Accra, which
included the decongestion of the city and improving sanitation,
housing, health and education.
Dr. Vanderpuije expressed worry about the standards of public schools,
saying that the shift system impeded academic work and that 2000 more
classroom needed to be built to accommodate more than 70,000 pupils in
the metropolis.
He said that: “We are committed and will roll our sleeves and tap into
your rich experiences to make Accra a city befitting it status” The
Accra Mayor said that efforts would be made to ensure that the people
in the city conducted themselves well, there was effective
transportation system, modern hospitals and good housing programme to
meet the accommodation needs of the people.
Led by Dr. Susan Blaustein, Co-Director of the Millennium City
Initiative (MCI), the delegation would identify practical solutions
facing Accra and examine the current situation in Accra as well as
study its history.
Based on knowledge that would be acquired and thoughtful exchange, the
experts would derive a set of policy recommendations that would
capitalizes on both teams’ wide ranging technical expertise, as well
as newly available technologies to ensure that the development of
Accra becomes a sustainable urban landmark.
The MCI is a set of activities initiated by the Millennium Project,
which was inaugurated by the former United Nations (UN) Secretary-
General Kofi Annan to recommend operational strategies to achieve the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) agreed upon by world leaders at
the 2000 UN Summit. It is presently being implemented by the MDG
Support Team in the Poverty Group of the United Nations Development
Program (UNDP). The Millennium Villages Project is working in ten sub-
Saharan countries (now including Ghana) at the community level, to
advice city authorities on how to implement an integrated set of rural
interventions aimed at helping sub-subsistence farming communities to
achieve the MDGs. The MCI is initially focusing on advising the cities
in attracting Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), with a view to creating
employment, stimulating domestic enterprise development and fostering
sustainable economic growth.
Dr. Blaustein, who designed the MCI together with Earth Institute
Director Jeffrey D. Sachs and Co-Director Karl P. Sauvant, said the
MCI was an innovative set of intervention aimed at helping African
countries to attract sufficient income generating investment to enable
them to achieve the MDGs by 2015.
She said the partnership would work especially in the areas of health
and education and noted that a pilot study on these areas had started
in Kumasi with low cost intervention in neonatal mortality and early
childhood education.
Dr. Blaustein said there was an investment component to the
partnership.
“A New Accra for a Better Ghana”, Campaign was launched by the Mayor
on December 3 this year, where he announced that Accra had been
selected to be transformed into a Millennium City by the Earth
Institute of the Columbia University.
Under the project the Earth Institute will partner with the AMA to
address some of the city’s urban and environmental challenges and help
residents achieve the millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The
initiative is being directed by a development economist Dr. Jeffrey
Sachs, who is expected to declare Accra as a Millennium City on
January 15, 2010. The delegation would tour “Accra by night” on
Saturday and “Accra by Day” on Sunday 6 December
Accra, Dec 5, GNA
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1. What does the “Millennium city” mean?
2. For whom is the Millennium city?
3. Why should Accra aspire to be a Millennium city?
4. When should the Millennium city crystalise?
5. Who will be involved in making this Millennium city materialises?
6. Where will the Millennium city start and end?
7. How will the Millennium city evolve from the Accra we know and
have?
8. Which parts of Accra will start the process of becoming a
Millennium city?
9. How will the Millennium city relate to the rest of the country?
10. What if I don’t want Accra to be a “Millennium city”