Sekesua and
Akateng, two farming communities in the Upper Manya-Krobo District, are to benefit from the Rural Telephony
Project targeted at underprivileged and deprived communities to help improve
their telecommunication networks and reception.
The two communities have been listed among
other communities across the country to benefit from the project.
This was contained in a statement released
by government recently during a press briefing by Mr Felix Kwakye Ofosu then
Deputy Minister for Information and Media Relations.
Under the Project, rural communities with
population less than 200,000 are provided with 2G/3G base stations with small
cellular antennae enabling internet Wi-Fi services that improves or provides
telecommunication network and reception.
Sekesua and Akateng are commercial hubs of
the Upper Manya-Krobo District and the whole region considering the huge
markets in the two communities which are patronized by traders from all over
the country, yet have telecommunications problems.
Akateng, a fishing community and a marketing
center along the Volta Lake, has a vibrant market that attracts traders from
Kumasi, Tema, Accra, Akosombo, Koforidua and Nkawkaw to buy farm produce mainly
from some of the Islands on the Volta Lake.
The traders go to Akateng to buy goods like
tilapia, charcoal, vegetables, groundnuts, beans, maize, yams, cattle, pigs,
goats and sheep on market days which spread from Tuesday to Thursday every
week.
Akateng serves as one of the major marketing
center for many of the Islands in the Volta Lake.
Despite it’s commercial importance,
telephone reception is so bad in the area that people have to climb trees and
move away about two kilometres to certain locations before they could make or
receive calls, a situation which affects their trading businesses.
The GNA Media Auditing and Development
Tracking Project Team sponsored by STAR-Ghana gathered that apart from MTN, no
other network is available and even that was not stable.
The GNA Team gathered that sometimes for
weeks, people in the Akateng community and its surroundings could not make or
receive a calls. This aids armed robbers to take advantage of the situation to
attack the traders since they could not make any call for help.
This also affects traders on the Islands
because they are not able to contact their business partners to agree on prices
and volumes of supply to be transported to the market
In the case of Sekesua, there is no network
at all, telephone communication is not part of the live of the people.
When the GNA team visited the two
communities and announced the government’s intention to them, they were happy
and urge government not to make it a lip service since several appeals on the
issue had fallen on deaf ears.
(GNA)
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