Author's note: This was written on 17/3/2013. It is being posted today because I was unable to do so on the day. Please read on:
Current
events clearly show that the time has come for a radical approach to
the business of providing treated water for both domestic usage and
industrial purposes in Ghana.
It is totally unacceptable that
in 21st century Africa, a nation such as Ghana is still unable to
provide something as basic as treated water, for distribution through
underground networks of pipelines to its citizens countrywide, on a
sustained basis.
If one stops for a while to do some lateral
thinking, it soon becomes obvious that the current structure of the
ponderous behemoth that is the Ghana Water Company Limited (GWCL),
though a commercial failure, makes it a perfect fit and takeover
candidate, for the military in Ghana to absorb into its fold - and
run efficiently for the benefit of all Ghanaians.
Any
transfer of the GWCL to the 48 Engineers Regiment to run as one of the
entities in the Ghana Armed Forces' Defence Industries wing, must be
done in tandem with a complete ban of the production and sale of sachet
water countrywide.
The GWCL could derive substantial
revenues from a monopoly given it by law, to produce bottled
(biodegradable, naturally!) filtered water for the companies currently
producing sachet water.
Those companies could be made
distributors of their own-label bottled filtered water produced for them
in hygienic conditions by the GWCL - to distribute as a business to
replace the lost revenue from the production of sachet water: an
enterprise that really ought to be banned completely in Ghana for public
health reasons.
The plastic used to store the bagged water
for sale to the public not being impermeable, it freely admits outside
pollutants through minute pores too small for the naked eye to see -
making the water potentially harmful to human health.
The
production of sachet water of the type that goes on in Ghana, would
never be permitted in any nation where consumer protection is taken
seriously, and hygiene regulations governing the production of water
for sale to the public to drink, strictly enforced.
Above
all, Ghanaians would no longer be held to ransom and be denied water
by disgruntled employees of a GWCL - out to take revenge on a government
of the day against which they had a grievance and wanted to make
unpopular politically - were it transferred to the 48 Engineers Regiment
to run as a business.
Water is life - and its production and distribution must not be allowed to become political football under any circumstances.
The
production of treated water for distribution to homes offices, schools
factories and other building structures nationwide, must not be allowed
to become infected by the divisive politics currently practised in
Ghana.
There are those who say that the current
dry-taps-phenomenon in homes and businesses in urban Ghana, might be
part of the pattern of shortages of the essentials of modern life (the
disappearance of LPG gas cited to me as an example), deliberately
engineered for political reasons, as part of a regime-change strategic
plan by some of the most determined opponents of the present regime. If
true, that would certainly be intolerable.
One hopes that
that is not the case, but to forestall that ever happening, the GWCL
must be taken out of the hands of the hapless civilian managers who have
failed so miserably to run it efficiently over the decades, and handed
over to the 48 Engineers Regiment to manage going forward.
Tel: 027 745 3109.
Thursday, 21 March 2013
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