GRi BEF News 23 – 11 - 2001

Ghana Ports loses 10 billion cedis revenue from occupied berths

Inter-bank exchange rates

Ideal Home Exhibition launched

Shopping Mall traders want hawkers ejected

 

 

Ghana Ports loses 10 billion cedis revenue from occupied berths

 

Tema (Greater Accra) 23 November 2001- The Ghana Ports and Harbours Authority (GPHA) lost 10 billion cedis in revenue between 1995 and 2000 because laid-up fishing vessels occupied berths at the Tema Fishing Harbour.

 

Mr Jim Fugar, Tema Fishing Harbour Manager, said the vessel owners owed GPHA about six billion cedis in rent as at June but said they were insolvent.

 

He was briefing the 13-member Parliamentary Select Committee on Road and Transport during a fact-finding visit to the Tema Main Harbour and the Fishing Harbour on Wednesday.

 

Fifteen laid-up vessels are now permanently occupying four out of the eight berths and could not be used for any other operational and commercial activity like water supply to vessels, crane service, ship handling and bunkering services.

 

Mr Fugar said apart from hampering the income-generating capacity of the Port, the vessels, some of which have been there since 1987, stood the risk of sinking as it happened to MV Bani on February 11. 

 

The cost of salvaging it has been put at about 400,000 US dollars. Furthermore, occupation of protected water area by laid-up vessels limited the harbour basin and rendered navigation and turning of ships in the port difficult and dangerous.

 

The vessels were also a source of pollution since they discharge oils and lubricants into the harbour basin. These vessels also posed security and safety problems and impacted negatively on the fishing industry.

 

Mr Fugar said the GPHA constituted a committee made up of all stakeholders, which in turn commissioned a condition survey for all the laid-up vessels in July 2000.

 

Out of the 28 vessels surveyed, 15 of them were deemed unserviceable, six were considered repairable and operational within a short time, while seven others were said to be repairable.

 

The committee also considered waste management options like scrapping, off-site recycling and dumping and these were discussed with vessel owners to seek their co-operation and collaboration in solving the problems but some of the companies refused to co-operate.

 

Mr Fugar said so far out of 31 vessels five have been repaired, eight were beached in emergency disposal to prevent them from sinking in the port, one sank and two have been dumped, while four were under repairs.

 

Seven others were deemed unserviceable, three might be serviceable, while one, MV Subin, was being prepared for dumping by removing her useful parts.

 

Mr Fugar called for the passing of a new legislation on the importation of seaworthy fishing vessels, that would also give time limit and general conditions for laid-up of vessels in the fishing ports.

 

Such a law, must also clear all ambiguities in the authority given to the GPHA on the disposal of laid-up vessels, the detention of vessels in port on court orders and clarify responsibilities of vessel owners.

 

Mr Fugar said the fishing harbour needed a designated area for laid-up facilities so that broken down ships did not use operational space, noting that this, however, called for a huge investment.

 

He said the Japanese government had warned that it would not invest anymore in the Tema Fishing Harbour if laid-up vessels were not removed from the port.

 

Members of the Parliamentary Select Committee noted the problems raised and agreed on the need to pass a legislation to protect the country's fishing industry from collapse.

GRi…/

 

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Inter-bank exchange rates

 

Accra (Greater Accra) 23 November 2001

 

Currency                Buying                                Selling

 

US Dollar            7,054.45                               7,258.00

Pound Sterling       9,981.34                        10,272.97

French Franc           943.49                                970.15

Swiss Franc           4,254.62                             4,373.71

Deutsche Mark     3,163.36                              3,254.75

Canadian Dollar     4,407.75                             4,531.53

Japanese Yen           57.24                              58.87

Dutch Guilder        2,808.40                             2,887.78

S/African Rand       707.21                                 726.63

Euro                      6,188.06                             6,360.92

CFA Franc                   9.43                                9.70

Naira                            64.31                              66.16

Ecowas/WAUA     9,068.19                            --------

GRi…/

 

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Ideal Home Exhibition launched

 

Accra (Greater Accra) 23 November 2001 - An Ideal Home Exhibition aimed at assisting women to improve the home environment to maximise the health and well being of every member of the household was launched in Accra.

 

The exhibition, scheduled for April to May next year, is being organised by the Ghanaian Women Initiative Foundation (GAWIF), in collaboration with the Association of Ghana Industries.

 

It would be under the theme: "The Ideal Home - A vital Institution for Development and Progress". The GAWIF was established in 1999 to team up with other strategic partners to advocate for the socio-economic and political empowerment of the Ghanaian woman.

   

Mrs. Emma Mitchell, President of GAWIF, said the exhibition was in line with their objective to provide women with knowledge and information for their empowerment.

 

The exhibition, she said, would bring into focus how vital an ideal home was to the development and progress of the communities as well as the nation. "It would also raise awareness about better and cheaper means of providing an ideal home, adequate foods, alternative ways of cooking healthy and safe foods as well as preservation," she said.

 

Mrs. Mitchell, a Member of the Council of State, said they were of the hope that the exhibition would promote the creation of ideal communities and an ideal nation as women remain homemakers.

GRi.../

 

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Shopping Mall traders want hawkers ejected

 

Accra (Greater Accra) 23 November 2001 - Traders at the Makola Shopping Mall on

Thursday expressed concern about the presence of hawkers on the pavements around the mall.

 

They said the presence of the hawkers was having a negative effect on their businesses, making it difficult for prospective customers to shop at the mall.

 

The Operations Manager of the mall, Mrs Rose-Margaret Kpodo, said the presence of the hawkers does not only promote criminal activities and give pickpockets the chance to operate but also generate filth that choked the gutters.

 

She said apart from forcing pedestrians to compete with vehicles for space on the roads, their presence does not generate revenue for the country. ''Traders who sell in the mall pay tax to the Internal Revenue Service whiles those on the pavements pay nothing but just a token to the Accra Metropolitan Authority.

 

''The problem is so appalling that traders at the mall find it very difficult to settle their rent and other bills to keep business moving in the mall," he said.

 

Mrs. Kpodo said AMA tried on two occasions to eject the hawkers from the pavements but the operation proved futile and that if the problem was not seriously tackled, pick pockets would take undue advantage of the situation and rob traders and travelers during the Christmas festivities.

 

She therefore, called on the authorities to adopt more effective measures to eject traders from the pavements to bring sanity to the area.

GRi.../

 

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