Funsi, (U/W), Aug. 19, –
Government has secured a Danish facility of over GHȻ62 million to build seven bridges in the North, under a project
dubbed “Northern Bridges Project”.
The bridges would be constructed
in Doninga in Builsa South, Kulungugu in Bawku Municipal in the Upper East
Region and at Sissili in Sissala East Municipal, as well as on the Kulun and
Ambalaara rivers in the Wa East District, all in the Upper West Region.
Construction of these bridges
among others, according to Mr Kwasi Amoako-Atta, the Minister of Roads and
Highways, is expected to help address the impact of perennial flooding on the
people of Northern Ghana.
Mr Amoako-Atta was speaking
during a durbar of Chiefs and people of the Funsi Traditional Area, as part of
President Akufo Addo’s two-day tour of the Upper West Region.
The Monk Civil Engineers and
Swaco Company are the two companies executing the project and had already
started work on the Doninga and Kulungugu bridges in the Upper East Region.
They are also mobilizing to move
to the Upper West Region to start work on Kulun and Ambalaara bridges soon.
“I have good news for you; by the
time we finish building the Doninga, Sissili, Kulun and Ambalaara bridges, a
road will be opened and people traveling from Upper East to Upper West Regions
will shorten their distance by 124-kilometres”, he said.
Mr. Amoako-Atta noted that, apart
from these bridges, the 39-kilometres Wahabu-Funsi-Yala and the 88-kilometre
Wa-Bulenga-Yala roads were also captured in the mid-year budget presented to
Parliament by Finance Minister, Mr Ken Offori-Atta.
He said 23-Kilometres out of the
39-kilometre Wahabu-Funsi-Yala road had been captured in the mid-year budget,
adding that, this had set his Ministry into working actively to go through the
procurement process as quickly as possible.
He said they have taken
10-kilometres out of the remaining kilometres and added to the Funsi town
roads, including the internal roads of the Funsi Senior High School, which
would be built to befit its status as the district capital.
The Roads Minister again noted
that, 28-kilometres out of the total 88-Kilometre Wa-Bulenga-Yala Road was
captured in the mid-year budget, adding that, the remaining 60-kilometres was
also covered under the Sino Hydro facility, which had already taken off.
“The President did us the honour
by cutting the sod for the Sino Hydro Project in Tamale and as I speak to you
now, the Tamale Interchange is progressing steadily.
At Lambussie, Mr Amoako-Atta
commended the land topography of the Lambussie District, saying they would not
have challenges constructing their roads as they strategized to tackle the
area’s roads in two phases.
He said phase one would
concentrate on re-gravelling while phase two would raise all the re-gravelled
roads to bitumen level.
The Roads Minister said the
4.7-Kilometre Lambussie road, six-kilometres Zini-Piina-Lambussie Junction road
had been awarded to Niger Savannah Construction Limited, at a total cost of GHȻ13.9 million.
Also, the 8.5-Kilometres
Lambussie-Banmwor road had been awarded to Upkeep Ventures at the same cost of
13.9 million, he said, stressing that, letters had been issued to this effect
and within the next five weeks the contractors would move to site.
Mr Amoako-Atta said the almost
40-kilometres Nadowli-Lawra-Nandom-Hamile stretch of road was being handled by
PW Ganem Company Limited, of which 82 per cent of work had been done already.
He said the 40-kilometre
Hamile-Tumu road had been awarded, and that, the good thing about that road was
the social intervention package built into it.
He said the social intervention
package would see to the provision of six boreholes in the Lambussie District
and another 10 in the Sissala West District.
GNA

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