When nature hits back with vengeance (Picture: Taken from online library) |
The
opportunity has come for PR and it must be milked before sunset, we need to get
some publicity and goodwill even while we try to save lives; this is what I see
some of the companies doing with their donations in the aftermath of the
Wednesday June 3, 2015 disaster.
It
came without any forewarning, passed before it could be noticed and yet left
footprints that can hardly be erased. Some described it as apocalypse, others
called it the twin disaster but I prefer to call it the Fire-flood because of the stunning collaboration between two enemies, fire and flood, which resulted
in a destructive show that left Ghana depopulated by a margin of over 150
precious lives.
Man was simply helpless (Picture from online library) |
The
rain came down ferociously and this together with the resultant flood and
widespread power outage in parts of the capital gave us a rude reminder and a
quick sense of man’s vulnerability.
It
first came as an exaggeration or better still like one of those devastating
foreign news about deadly earthquakes and hurricanes that are so distant from
us, but pictures and videos soon came slapping us with the reality and plunging
mother Ghana into a sober reflection on the distressing impact of our clash
with nature.
Activities
in the capital city nearly came to a halt and casualty figures were bandied
around. Not only helpless toddlers and women, but stout young men with all
their agility and strength were swayed in an angry tide and washed down drains
like pieces of paper. It still blows my mind how flood water could plot with
fuel spillage to spark an inferno that would soon angrily reduce living beings
into charred bodies.
As
if to stir the feelings of sensitive viewers and relatives of the victims, we
saw our brothers striped of the little dignity left of them even as corpses.
Their remains were loaded like logs into the bucket of a goods-carrying truck
and paraded in the open to show how ineffective our ambulance service/emergency
service system is and how far back we are in our preparedness to handle
emergencies. We were simply tactless and this might have contributed to the
level of fatality.
These
were the same individuals who left home full of life in pursuit of bread to
keep “man” (and family) going, little did they know they were going to end up by
close of day in a putrid cold room and freezer in transit to the ancestral
village. They will soon have their last posthumous public appearance to wrap up
their rudely interrupted earthly journey from which point they shall be cramped
into their narrow wooden beds to be re-integrated with mother earth from which
they came.
In
terms of the degree of loss and severity of agony visited on mother Ghana, this
June 3 fire-flood ranks topmost, at least in recent history. The May 9 stadium
disaster which left about 127 dead broke hearts and shook the very foundation
of the country and same was the famous Melcom tragedy which left human beings
helplessly trapped underneath debris and heavy concrete slabs right before the
naked eyes of onlookers who though could watch the victims desperately wave
from across the bridge of life and death, could only do little.
And the water level kept rising angrily |
If
this year’s flood was this devastating, we can’t escape the conclusion that
next year’s will be similar or worse given the increasing population in the
capital city, the continuous blocking of drains and haphazard siting of
structures which are done with impunity under the watch of our leaders who
prefer to deal leniently and selectively with law breakers for purposes of
political expediency.
The kneejerk reaction will lose steam in a matter of days, the threat and or
promise to take aggressive action to sanitise the system will fade into thin
air and we will all go back to bed until nature attacks again. These things
must stop and the time is now. Beyond the impulsive demolition and the comic
scenes of staged clean ups, let us have some early warning systems and better
integrate key institutions like the meteorological service into the scheme of
things.
The
AMA task force and inspectors must get to the actual work beyond just hounding and harassing
the hawkers and instead sniff for sprawling slums and construction works that
have the potential of causing havoc.
If
we have to shape the process for the issuance of building permit and weed out
crooks who condone and connive with developers to overlook the general good of
the citizenry which causes us these headaches in the long term, nothing should
stop us from doing so, otherwise we might just want to go to bed and continue
to die when nature strikes with vengeance.
Nuumo Oko (Library picture) |
Now Ghana's (and Accra's) version of "Sodom and Gomorrah" is gone courtesy Nuumo Oko’s reactive action but are we not
merely redistributing these folks to the adjourning slums? What measures are in
place to soak the many ripples the exercise generates including the near
uprising as witnessed on Monday? And how did we even get here to have this huge
congregation before evicting them? What shows that we won’t watch them sneak back
given the precedents we have witnessed?
That
is why I want to believe corporate Ghana can go beyond the ensuing PR gimmicks
and funfair. Instead of this annual
ritual of donations which may largely go unaccounted for, given the Ghana in
which we find ourselves, a long term CSR project could be the provision of a
low cost- I mean low cost- residential facilities in partnership with
government to house these slum dwellers, then we can begin to better guard the
environment to prevent the springing up of more such unplanned settlements.
Is this the end of Sodom and Gomorrah? (Credit: Library picture) |
By
this we would not only have created some space for the free flow of water (to
reduce the frequency and intensity of the flood) but we would also have given
human face and forward-looking approach to the exercise.
Again,
let us get proactive; let us take some bold and masculine steps, get our hands
dirty and implement workable strategies that will prevent a recurrence,
otherwise we risk wailing again and celebrating this annual festival of floods
and PR funfair.
I
have spoken my mind and not yours; let the discerning reader and
well-meaning-Ghanaian make meaning of this piece
The
writer is a journalist and a blogger at the thekroboquill.blogspot.com and can
be reached via klonobi2007@gmail.com or
0266 000 747. You can follow him on twitter with the handle @henkingklonobi