Land Litigations in Accra and Kumasi Have Delayed Agenda 111 project – Health Minister
Hon. Kwaku Agyeman-Manu, the Health Minister, has revealed that land litigations in Accra and Kumasi are affecting the Agenda 111, project.
The government is working hard to ensure that these challenges are addressed to enable the project to move on smoothly, he said
“It is too early for me to predict whether we will finish or not. But optimistically, that is what we want to do and we try to push ourselves.
“We still have challenges with even land, especially in the big cities like Accra and Kumasi. We are now changing the infrastructural design so that instead of spreading across a bigger land area we want to go up. So they are doing designs.
“Even in the communities, in the districts, some chiefs are coming and there are litigations in some areas,” the Dormaa Central Member of Parliament said while taking delivery of some medical supplies from the Italian government on Thursday, May 5.
President Nana Akufo-Addo on Tuesday, August 17 201 commissioned the Agenda 111 project which will ensure the construction of 111 hospitals across the country.
During the commission of the project in Trede in the Ashanti Region, the President said among other things that the project will be providing 20,000 jobs for health professionals when completed.
The Health Minister said the Ministry of Health is going to recruit more doctors, nurses, and pharmacists when the project is done.
He also said that more indirect jobs are also going to be created by the project implementation.
The president further indicated that the Covid-19 pandemic has exposed years of under-investment in Ghana’s health sector.
To that end, he said his administration is improving on the investment in the health sector of the economy.
He said “I am glad that the biggest ever investment in the nation’s healthcare is being made. We met this morning because of the ravages of Covid 19 which has affected every country on the planet. For us in Ghana not only has the pandemic disrupted our daily lives, but it has also exposed the deficiencies in our healthcare system because of the years of underinvestment and neglect.”