Wa-Ghana, Oct. 01, GNA – Several Municipal and District Assemblies in the five Northern Regions of Ghana have not gazetted their byelaws and are also without court facilities in the localities to prosecute environmental sanitation offenders.
As a result, environmental health prosecutors are using the national laws to prosecute offenders, which make it difficult because many of them have not been trained on the rudiments of the law to make cases relevant before the law courts for judges and magistrates to deliver judgment on the offenders.
This was made known at a two-day capacity training workshop on environmental health prosecution for environmental health prosecutors by the Ministry of Sanitation and Water Resources, aimed to improve knowledge and confidence of the prosecutors to enforce laws and ensure that standards were followed.
Mr Kweku Quansah, Environmental Health and Sanitation Director, addressing participants said one of the challenges the Ministry had found wrong in the legal space was the lack of byelaws in most of the assemblies and the inadequate capacity building on the part of prosecutors.
“Byelaws in most district assemblies have not been gazetted and environmental health prosecutors have to rely on national laws, which are too general for them to secure successful judgment,” he said.
He appealed to District Assemblies to ensure that they promulgated their bylaws to make prosecution of environmental sanitation cases easier while they also collaborated effectively with the courts to understand the role of the sector properly, especially the role it plays in trying to protect the health of the people.
On the issue of political interference, Mr Quansah disagreed with that perception saying, “The real challenge that the sector faces is the lack of capacity building of prosecutors to know the right thing to do, knowing the environmental laws, and enforcing them appropriately is surely the way forward.”
Mr Quansah encouraged administrators and politicians, as well as the media to support the enforcement of environmental laws in the communities to help the Ministry ensure a clean environment for a healthy life of the people.
Madam Charlotte Akwaah-Adjei Marfo, the Programme Manager, Greater Accra Metropolitan Area (GAMA) who gave an overview of the project said it was sanitation and water project for Ghana with World Bank grant of 150 million dollars to support the government’s efforts to increase access to improved sanitation and improved water supply in the Greater Accra and Kumasi with emphasis on low-income communities, and to strengthen management of environmental sanitation.
She said the project had four components: provision of environmental sanitation and water supply services to priority low-income areas; improvement and expansion of the water distribution network; planning, improvement, and expansion of environmental sanitation services; institutional strengthening of Municipal, Metropolitan and national institutions.
The second phase of the project, which involves 125 million dollars, would cater for the five northern regions.
Madam Adjei Marfo said the sanitation and water gaps were still huge to accomplish to meet the SGDs and the National Development Indicators.
She said the project was working to increase access to household toilets, provide safe water in the communities to benefit women and children and as well improve public health.
The Programme Manager said the sector had realised that it had not enough strength at the districts and communities for prosecutors to go through the entire circle of the environmental health chain, hence, the capacity training workshop organised for them to enhance the knowledge.
Madam Naatu Freda, the Upper West Regional Director of Environmental and Sanitation Department, appealed to the Ministry to organise more training workshops to prosecutors and staff to enforce environmental sanitation laws in the communities.
She said efforts at ensuring environmental cleanliness and hygiene to meet the Sustainable Development Goals targets would be a mirage if the assemblies failed to gazette their byelaws for the sector to enforce the laws in the communities and urged the assemblies to expedite action to ensure that byelaws were gazetted.
The Gomdah and Associates, a law firm, took the Prosecutors through “the jurisdiction of the courts of Ghana, code of ethics for the environmental health prosecutors, summary trial of cases in district courts, drafting of summons and charge sheets, witness and adduction of evidence and closing address and judgement.”