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River Gods Demand 5 Humans As Sacrifice Before Re-Commissioning Of A Toilet Facility

Toilet Facility

Residents of Ampabame No-1 in the Ashanti Region cannot use a new 32-seater toilet facility because a river deity has demanded 5 human beings to be sacrificed before it can be commissioned.

Toilet Facility

A priestess serving the Tano gods, guardians of the Bomofia stream, close to the facility told Nhyira FM that the gods are angry with residents’ constant dumping of waste in the stream.

She also said the gods are unhappy with the siting of a septic tank for the facility.

The Ampabame community self help toilet project was started in 2005 in the Atwima Kwanwoma district of Ashanti. It was completed 15-years later due to financial constraints.

Assembly Member for the Area, Richard Ofosuhene said after an earlier commissioning, patronage of the toilet facility was low due to the shrine’s demand for human sacrifice, thus had to be locked up.

The 32-seater toilet facility sits close to the Bomofia stream and a walking distance to the Tano shrine.

The highly polluted Bomofia stream looks choked due to the volume of waste in it.

The Unit Committee Chairman, Chief Kojo Acheampong expressed concern majority of the residents depend on the Bomofia stream for water for their house chores, but recalcitrant residents continue to pollute it despite its usefulness.

Priestess of the Tano gods, after what looked like an hour of consultations with the gods told our news team, the facility cannot be operational without the required human sacrifice, as quoted by JoyNews.

The Assembly Member said he will work with some elders of the community to perform the necessary rituals.

River gods demand 5 humans as sacrifice before re-commissioning of a toilet facility

“We have heard her, we cannot abandon the facility, so we will do the needful to re-commission it.’

The 32-seater facility will be the second public toilet in the town to serve the larger population if commissioned.

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Ghana will receive €100 million this year from the German government under its ‘Compact with Africa’ Programme to support the country’s renewable energy sector. Germany is providing the funding through its technical cooperation agency, GIZ, and development bank, KfW. The two countries are currently finalising modalities of the financial support which will include technical and vocational training for Ghanaians in the renewable energy sector. Event The Deputy Head of Mission at the German Embassy, Mr Hans-Helge Sander, disclosed this at the opening of the 2017 West Africa Clean Energy and Environment (WACEE) Exhibition and Conference in Accra on Tuesday. “Ghana has been named as one of the three countries in Africa to benefit from the bilateral reform partnership within the G-20 ‘Compact with Africa’ Programme. The initiative will bring up to an additional €100 million to support the renewable energy sector in Ghana,” he said. Mr Sander explained that the financial support was a government-to-government arrangement, which meant that the federal government would task GIZ and KfW to implement Germany’s contribution. “I am pointing this out because lately, several private companies have approached the embassy with requests for information about how the private sector can benefit from the German offer. As I said, there will be no direct opening for cooperation between the German government and private companies,” the deputy head of mission stated. However, he added that there would be options for participation through public tenders and calls for proposal when KfW, GIZ and the Ghanaian government start implementing the funding from the compact. Asked how the fund would be implemented, Mr Sander told the Daily Graphic that the implementation would be done through the Government-goes-Solar initiative or other programmes. “Details of the implementation are still under discussion between the two governments,” he added. Measures The Director In-charge of Renewable and Alternative Energy at the Ministry of Energy, Mr Wisdom Ahiataku-Togobo, who represented the minister of energy, said the government was putting in place policies and measures to help attract private sector investment into the renewable energy sector. “Ghana has followed the footsteps of Germany and has enacted a Renewable Energy Act which seeks to create the enabling environment for attracting private sector investment in renewable energy and energy efficiency,” he said. He said the country had also realised some modest growth in the renewable energy sector as it could now boast a 22.5-megawatt (MW) capacity of utility scale solar farm. “We can also boast a waste-to-energy power plant in operation at Ashaiman which has tremendously improved the sanitation situation in the Ashaiman District,” he said, adding that the government intended to replicate that in other districts.

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