President John Dramani Mahama on Wednesday broke grounds for the
official commencement of work on the Kasoa interchange with a promise to make
asphalt about 95 kilometres of urban roads in the Central Region.
He said the interchange which was financed by a Brazilian loan
facility would also have two flyovers at the Galiea and CP areas in the Ga
South District of the Greater Accra Region.
The President said urban areas that would
benefit from the 95-Kilometre asphalt roads included Cape Coast, Winneba,
Elmina, Mankessim, and Agona Swedru.
He said the construction of the Kasoa projects were
transformational projects that would contribute to the development of the area.
President Mahama said apart from the flyovers, government would
also build an ultra-modern Polyclinic to replace the old one that was affected
by the relocation exercise to pave way for construction work.
The construction of the flyovers and interchange would ease the
perennial traffic on the Kasoa-Winneba road, which at its peak time records
five kilometres per hour traffic movement, particularly at the weekends.
Apart from the road works, government would also construct
ancillary projects such as craches, day care centres, bus terminals, boreholes
in 10 communities in the area and improve on the link roads in the Kasoa
Municipality.
President Mahama said the Kasoa projects which would be
substantially completed by October this year would allow free movement of
vehicles from Accra to the Western Region and the vice versa.
The President also promised to construct the 33-kilometre
Kasoa-Amasaman road which would facilitate the movement of vehicles from Kasoa
and its environs to Kumasi and other major cities along that route.
On the cost of the Kasoa interchange project, President Mahama
condemned his political opponents for 'wrongly throwing the dust into the eyes
of Ghanaians' that the project cost has been inflated.
President Mahama tasked the Minister of roads and Highways to
form a committee involving all stakeholders in the demolition and relocation
exercise to determine the kind of compensation that was to be given to the
affected people in those exercises.
Alhaji Inusah Fuseini, Minister for Roads and Highways, said the
construction of the flyovers and interchange had become necessary because about
23,000 vehicles use the road on daily basis creating heavy traffic congestion.
He said the length of the interchange and flyover at the Kasoatraffic light area would be 270 metres.
Madam Irene Vida Gala, Brazilian Ambassador to Ghana, commended
government for maintaining peace over the years and gave the assurance that
Brazil would continue to support Ghana with her development agenda.

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