Chairman of the Transport Committee in Parliament, Kennedy Osei Nyarko, has indicated the government’s resolve to remove squatters and residents along the Tema motorway to make way for the road’s planned expansion.
Government has announced its intention to expand the motorway into a 10-lane thoroughfare with eight flyovers for $380 million. Construction is expected to be completed in 36 months.
According to Mr. Nyarko, currently the land meant for the expansion has been encroached upon by illegal squatters and parts of it have also been legally given away to private individuals by the local assemblies along the stretch.
Speaking on Joy FM’s The Super Morning Show, the Akim Swedru MP, aid ample notice has been given to those in the vicinity, thus work on removing them from the area will commence earnestly.
He, however, stated that those who had acquired land in the area legally through local assembly allocations will be compensated.
“You remember some time ago, the minister for roads and highways and I went on some tour around the motorway to engage those people there and advise them to relocate because there will soon be critical work on it [the motorway]. It generated a lot of heat; it came on television and whatnot.
“I mean so already they were notified, those people, the illegal occupants on that stretch were already informed about the intended project the ministry wants to embark on and the advice to relocate. So those people who are occupying those places illegally, I’m not sure they have any legal right of stay on that property. The original owner of that property has come to use it for a project so they have to vacate,” he said.
He added that “People who maybe the assembly may have legally allocated some land to people and they have developed on it, then certainly government has to pay compensation to those people for them to relocate.
“I think it’s part of the arrangement the ministry through GIIF and the contractor would have to look at it to make sure that those who are legally living there may be as a result of the assembly allocating some land to them and putting up their property on it and definitely their property is going to be affected, then it is incumbent on the initiate to find compensation for them.
“But those occupying there illegally I don’t think they deserve any compensation.”
Latest Stories
-
Battle of the Beasts: American Tabiti destroys Jacob Dickson to win WBO Africa Cruiserweight title
1 minute -
Speaker defers ruling on Afenyo-Markin’s government mass dismissals request
14 minutes -
How Trump’s Africa strategy may become a double-edged sword
15 minutes -
Why the expanded FIFA Club World Cup is worth trying
16 minutes -
Mahama promises to end power fluctuations in North East Region
18 minutes -
Battle of the Beasts: Ahmed Abdul floors Haruna Mohammed to win national cruiserweight title
33 minutes -
Manasseh Azure Awuni’s heartfelt message to President Mahama on the Zoomlion contract action
42 minutes -
Battle of the Beasts: Theo Allotey batters Daniel Gorsh to win WBO African Bantamweight title
47 minutes -
Why always fuel: The growing burden of energy levies in Ghana
57 minutes -
Asantehene urges chiefs to offer lands as equity for farming
1 hour -
Pay up or stay out: Ahafo Regional Minister warns timber merchants over unpaid royalties
1 hour -
Your allowances are assured – Mahama tells nursing trainees
1 hour -
Tafo MCE urges BECE candidates to stay honest and focused
2 hours -
‘I saw my childhood in a small boy carrying firewood in a village’ – Nana Tea shares how he began philanthropy
4 hours -
UPSA launches its first faculty-authored textbook project
4 hours