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Alleged water contamination at Asutsuare

By Wendy Amarteifio
Asutsuare
Alleged water contamination:Asutsuare farmers appeal for test to be conducted
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At Asutsuare in the Shai Osudoku district in Greater Accra, Some farmers have appealed for a test to be conducted on the water in the area to establish the veracity or otherwise of its suspected contamination.

According to the farmers, they suspected the water they were using on their farms had been polluted by chemicals and waste materials allegedly discharged into the water by a manufacturing company operating in the community.


According to reports, at some farmlands in Asutsuare last week, a number of dead fish were seen in a section of the drains through which water flowed into the Volta Lake.

There were also some foamy substances in the water that were drifting downstream into the Lomey River and the Volta Lake.

Mr.Patrick Ansah Zoiku, a farmer, said the hitherto clean water which the indigenes used for farming and bathing now smelled of chemicals used by the manufacturing firm, Shinefeel Ghana Company, which produces toilet rolls, egg crates, paint, plastic products, and roofing sheets.

He said the farmers in the area could no longer depend on the water for their farming activities since it could be dangerous applying it on crops.

According to a  resident, Mr. Dauda Tetteh,  the company continued to discharge waste materials into the Lome River, which also serves as a source of drinking water for some people downstream despite numerous complaints by the people.

“We have complained to the managers of the factory over the matter but all our pleas have gone unattended to. We, the youth of the area, are fed up and want to call on the company to find alternative ways of discharging its waste,” he said.


In his response, the Corporate Affairs Manager of Shinefeel Ghana Ltd, Mr. John Awuku Dziwornu, denied the claims.

He said treated wastewater from the company flowed through a drain to join the main Kpong irrigation system that had over 3,000 acres of land on which rice was produced.

Mr. Dziwornu said even though Asutsuare and its environs had access to potable water, some people had decided to use water from the river for their daily activities.

READ MORE: Chinese fish farm closed indefinitely

The manager admitted that when power went off, it affected the company’s filtration system which might have caused some leakages.

He, however, denied that that led to the discharge of poisonous materials into the drain.

According to Mr. Dziwornu, the people were speaking out of ignorance and said the company would support any form of testing by the appropriate regulatory agencies.

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