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DECONGESTION: An exercise in futility

Of all the problems in Accra, the city’s new mayor has made it a top priority to get rid of street hawkers in the central business district and a couple of other commercial centres. It’s been tried before. Alfred Vanderpuije knows it but he seems determined to succeed where those before him failed. But he won’t do any better than his predecessors. The so-called decongestion exercise will fail – again!

Mr. Vanderpuije’s advisors should tell him to focus on more pressing issues – like developing an efficient drainage system, sorting out the city’s garbage issues and ensuring that Accra is as well-planned as a capital city should be. If he goes on with this decongestion exercise, money would be wasted but the situation won’t change – the same scenario as four three years ago when about three hundred thousand Ghana cedis (or three billion cedis) went down the drain in a needless and futile attempt to get the hawkers off the pavements of Makola.

Let’s face it. The central business district of Accra is a commercial centre. The whole area is one big market and like every market we should expect the area to be a congested beehive of economic activity. Most African markets are like that. We’ve lived with it for decades and it’s hard to see why the mayor wants to change it.

These hawkers are on the streets because they need to survive. Government should be looking for ways to help their small businesses thrive instead of hounding them with batons, destroying their stalls and breaking their wares.

We live in a country where jobs are hard to come by. The only way for most unemployed men and women to earn a living is to sell on the streets. These people sell odds and ends just to be able to feed themselves (often with ‘gari’ and ‘moko yerawa’). I don’t think that the hawkers selling on the pavements in the central business district of Accra (and some other major cities in Ghana) enjoy standing in the scorching sun for the fun of it. If they had any other alternatives (like working in air-conditioned offices even as cleaners and messengers) they wouldn’t be standing on the streets. If these guys and gals had been offered the hope of a better future in their villages they wouldn’t have trekked all the way to Accra to hustle. They would have stayed in the hamlets, tilling the land to fend for themselves.

But they have been forced by circumstances to hustle on the streets and they should left alone. The pointless harassment of the hapless hawkers should stop and soon. Until government creates conditions that give them hope and alternative livelihoods, no one has any justification for hounding them off the streets. Government should be thankful that these young men and women have not taken to crime and have decided to make a living for themselves by hawking.

Under the circumstance, therefore, the central business district is where the hawkers should be. You chase them out of that area and they move to places we don’t want them to be. You destroy their small businesses and you force them into ventures that cause all sorts of problems for the society. They would go into armed robbery, prostitution and all other sorts of criminal activities that will create a greater nuisance for us all. The social cost of the so-called decongestion exercise is, therefore, worse than the minor inconvenience of the hawkers’ presence on the pavements.

Even if there was a compelling reason to get the hawkers off the streets, it would make no sense for Mr. Vanderpuije and the AMA to go chasing them away without making alternative arrangements for them to continue earning a livelihood. No such arrangements have been made. All the AMA and the supporters of the decongestion exercise can point to is the so-called ‘Pedestrian Shopping Mall’ – tucked away in the back alleys of the Kwame Nkrumah Circle. That “mall” (whoever decided to call it so needs to have his head re-examined) cannot contain a tenth of the vast number of traders in the central business district. To make matters worse shoppers don’t like to go there and so the few traders who were allocated stalls there have also decided to go where the shoppers go – the pavements.

The presence of the hawkers on the pavement is a problem. Granted. But this problem cannot just be chased away with batons. What is needed is a coherent plan to contain it. At this stage the best the AMA can do is containment.

Containing the hawkers means designating special areas in the city for them to earn the keep. The central business district should be the first of these areas. Add all the other big markets in the city and move all the hawkers there. Force them to remain there and tell the whole world that there are specified bustling market centres in the city where everyone can go and buy whatever they want. Those who go there will be well advised to park their cars in designated areas (like the car park on the high street) and walk.

After this has been done, it will be very easy to deal drastically with hawkers who have invaded places like the Oxford Street in Osu and the Circle-Avenor stretch, which has been taken over by motorbike sellers.
It’s hard to see the sense in the AMA chasing hapless hawkers from Makola and its environs (where they should be because it’s a market centre) whiles the streets of Osu and Avenor have been invaded by people who shouldn’t be there. Shouldn’t the AMA be rather forcing the people in places like Osu to move to the market centres?

This whole decongestion exercise has not been very well thought-through. And that’s why it will fail.
Decongestion – as is being done now – will also fail because the ruling party cannot live with the political consequences. The pigheaded gentleman who started it all – Nii Adjiri Blankson – started without thinking about how it will affect the political fortunes of his party. They paid dearly for it.

The NDC will not like to suffer the same fate and so I do not believe those in the party who say that they would rather take unpopular decisions and lose power. In fact, a lot of people support the exercise. It’s a popular exercise with the price tag of an unpopular one. They can pretend all they want but the NDC cannot afford to pay the price and very soon someone higher up in the pecking order will call up the mayor and tell him to either put the exercise on hold or give up completely. We’ve seen it before and it will happen again.

The decongestion will also fail because neither the city of Accra nor the central government has what it takes to keep the hawkers off the streets. Right now in the central business district, there are no hawkers on the pavements. They have been replaced by baton wielding officers drawn from the fire service, the police and the AMA’s own corps of city guards. Very soon the fire service will want it personnel back to do what they are supposed to do – putting out fires. The police officers are also needed to check and investigate crimes. The AMA doesn’t have the money to train enough city guards to keep the hawkers off the pavements. Soon the ‘forces’ who have been chasing the hawkers will run out of steam and the pavements will be just like Adjiri Blankson left them.

So the whole point of the decongestion exercise is lost on me. Does the mayor want to sleep on the pavements of Makola? This exercise – like the ones before it – has failure written all over it. Mr. Vanderpuije will soon find out. And he’d be as disappointed as those before him.

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Comments
1. sirgino
  06 Jul 2009 | 10:34 AM
  i live and work in koforidua. it is a beautiful city with few hawkers around the central market and infront of the ghana commercial bank. it is accepted. the hawkers, just like their colleaques in the banking hall and the market, must make a living. since the state would not provide for them, we must allow them anyway.
  Ato's Response  
  Perfect!
 
2. Boy George
  06 Jul 2009 | 10:40 AM
  Misplaced priorities... sanitation is the problem....
 
3. alex
  06 Jul 2009 | 10:43 AM
  i thot we all wanted this.
  Ato's Response  
  You thought wrong.
 
4. Dada Seth (Accra)
  06 Jul 2009 | 10:44 AM
  I commend the mayor for a good work done. What I want to urge him to do is to make sure this does not become a nine day wonder. The execise should be extended to the motor bike sellers along the main Circle/Nsawam road in front of the Caprice hotel.

Vanderpurye, go ahead and clean the city of the filth. we are solidly behind you. kudos!
 
5. Jetlee Kwame, SD.
  06 Jul 2009 | 11:04 AM
  IT THE SUSTAINABLITY THAT MATTERS
  Ato's Response  
  And that's why it will fail.
 
6. Edward
  06 Jul 2009 | 12:04 PM
  I believe the decongestion exercise has something to do with the coming of Messiah Obama. As much as I would want to think that the timing was ill-planned, I still believe it is a good cause. There is nothing like GOOD way of doing a BAD thing. Should we allow thieves to go free because they are hungry and cant get food to eat? Accra is a city and not a village, so we would need to practice more modern ways of selling/buying wares. Else let's forget about modernization and civilization.
  Ato's Response  
  Accra is a modern village. You want to create a city - lay it out properly, demarcate areas for specific purposes. Hawkers are supposed to be in market centres. Makola is one such place. It those in places like Avenor who should be chased off the pavements.
 
7. papa kow egyir
  06 Jul 2009 | 12:18 PM
  interesting aricle tho but Ato, even in the so-called developed countries, unemployment and sanitation problems exist but that doesnt mean because others have failed, we shouildnt try........THIS ONE DE3333 massa, i DISAGREE. lets decongest and it will help us tackle the others. how do u work on drainage and sanitation when they throw gabbage aroung more than u bring out/clean? its like building while raining and u standing in the rain to build!!! we need though rules to get ourselves from here to the next level....hypocrites we are who behave rationally when outside but as bush people in our own country......what a shame.
 
8. Makka
  06 Jul 2009 | 12:25 PM
  The decongestion exercise is to be applauded; the right thing has to be done...If people can travel from all over the country to agbobloshie/makola then when the hawkers leave to the Pedestrian mall,shoppers would still come there. In the west, people dont hawk on streets. After this, we could deal with sanitation, gutters, etc. Lets stand in solidarity for this decongestion. Just because we are used to seeing hawkers does not mean it is right/normal. a social canker is a canker!
  Ato's Response  
  I've seen hawkers on pavements of Washington DC - the capital of the world!
 
9. Come on!
  06 Jul 2009 | 12:33 PM
  I am a small business owner and I sell oranges on a table top. I would like to set up shop in front of the Jubilee house. Can I? You know, I can sneak a table there, set up my wares before the break of dawn and await the AMA officials, knowing that you expect that I will be compensated and relocated to a cheap alternative at the State's expense, irrespective of whether I had appropriate permit to be there or not. Yippee!
  Ato's Response  
  You can do it sans le tableau! Have you seen the dozens of street hawkers in front of the Jubilee House? They are the ones who should be driven away and forced to go to the market centres!
 
10. Naya 1
  06 Jul 2009 | 12:39 PM
  Ato paa, this piece is uncharacteristically cynical. Wisdom suggests that if at first you don't succeed, try again. Let the AMA try as many times as is required until it gets it right. At least we all agree that the hawkers don't belong on the streets. We need order in our society.
  Ato's Response  
  The same wisdom should tell you that if you want to try again you don't use the same methods which others used and failed.
 
11. Hubert, NY
  06 Jul 2009 | 01:08 PM
  Ato for president? I have cast my ballot already. You got it right!
  Ato's Response  
  Not so fast, please!
 
12. CHARLES
  06 Jul 2009 | 02:09 PM
  The decongestion exercise is not a bad idea, but how successful can it be without a very good alternative location for the hawkers?
 
13. stone
  06 Jul 2009 | 02:12 PM
  ato you have looked at one side of the issue,what about the inconvenience hawkers cause to pedestrians and other private citizens.sometimes hawkers even stand stand on parking spaces with no places for parking.The activities of hawkers has a lot of negative effects on the productivity of a country.Do you agree.Anyway principle has to be principle.The mayor should go ahead.ato you are a pessimist.
  Ato's Response  
  If you feel inconvenienced as a shopper then don't go to Makola. I'm sure it will help the decongestion exercise a great deal. The very people who go to buy from the hawkers are the ones who complain - because it's hard for them to drive through the area.
 
14. Me Too
  06 Jul 2009 | 02:32 PM
  Ghana needs a change. Ato Though the decongestion has failed befor and is going to fail, I think that we both Govenment and citizens need a change. Without change it is impossible to achieve development. We must develop and must put change as a goal. We need a place for our hawkers (a very big one) and also have to keep the city clean and nice.
Ghanaians must rethink of making our country a better place for us to live in. i wish i had never lived in accra. It is a bad place even to work and shop.
Ato, tell Ghanaians during the News paper review to stand for change. - Key to New Development in our contemporary world
  Ato's Response  
  There is a way out of this but the mayor is not thinking out of the box. Change will come when people start thinking out of the box. We can't do things the same old ways which brought failure to others in the past.
 
15. artkaye
  06 Jul 2009 | 02:37 PM
  Ato, some people will not agree with you. But we shall all live to see ...
  Ato's Response  
  I hope I am proved wrong.
 
16. naadza mills
  06 Jul 2009 | 03:05 PM
  Ato, much as I agree with you that it seems like an exercise in futility, I believe that we should strive hard to make it work. The pavements are for pedestrians and the streets are for cars but the hawkers have taken over. It's irritating when you have to walk on the streets rather than the pavements because hawkers have taken over.
  Ato's Response  
  Sacrifice small for your hustling brothers and sisters. Would you rather they turn to armed robbery and prostitution? I think it's ok for the hawkers to be in the market centres. But they should be kicked off the streets - like Oxford Street!
 
17. DZIEDZORM KENNEDY
  06 Jul 2009 | 03:33 PM
  that bearded man has to go and see the new methods adopted by the traders at circle. they now trade on small easy to carry tables. AMA has a lot of work to do. but i still believe they will do better than the others.
  Ato's Response  
  You are already seeing the beginnings of failure. But you believe. That's good. Keep hope alive.
 
18. Kwame Tei
  06 Jul 2009 | 04:23 PM
  We the pedistrains are part of this mess.if we refuse to patronise their stuff.they will be compelled to leave.All the best uncle abodwe
  Ato's Response  
  Exactly! But will the pedestrians stop? No. They won't. I just heard that the traders are still selling - albeit on a small scale - at the CBD and Kwame Nkrumah Circle.
 
19. Niibi Kwame
  06 Jul 2009 | 04:26 PM
  They hawkers return because they know the government will change its mind anyway. But when it comes to area designated for hawkers, most streets of the Okaishie Market has been left to them. The problem is that they have taken over the major roads causing so much traffic. Most of these hawkers have stalls in the markets. They have to make a living and so is the guy who building on the waterway entitled to some shelter. Besides these hawkers are a major cause of the filth in Accra. I think you've not gone shopping in Accra of late or you've not been insulted when you accidentally bump into a hawker. But you know this must not go on just because a party is afraid to lose an election.
 
20. solo sampa
  06 Jul 2009 | 04:44 PM
  The city mayor can work to the last drop of his sweat to clear the streets of hawkers, his own city guards will go back and take monies from the same traders and arrange for their comeback with the support of their bosses from the assembly. Ato, I agree with you on this score, I have seen such markets in most of the big cities of africa. This is the result of inequity in wealth distribution and development.
  Ato's Response  
  I agree with you - absolutely!
 
21. Wascarat
  06 Jul 2009 | 06:18 PM
  Well said! the reason for the failure of this Project is simple. So long as people cant go out to get Jobs they will have nothing to lose. And when u have nothing to lose ur options are few. So u try to survive by any means or die (crime & Prostitution) trying.
The only solution is Jobs.

 
22. myo
  06 Jul 2009 | 07:12 PM
  infact am very happy about this exercise.it should continue to make roads and pavements accessible .good work AMA BOSS we are behind you
  Ato's Response  
  I am not included in the "we".
 
23. myo
  06 Jul 2009 | 07:55 PM
  ato come to okiashie late in the night and you will see the garbage infact it is very bad.when you see it you even ask yourself was it human beings who generated this garbage.since the exercise i tell you it is better.we all need to help.
 
24. Abdul-Rafieu Banse
  06 Jul 2009 | 10:03 PM
  Good to know that someone thinks like me. You know what the problem is, Ato? Those who are supposed to deal with the problem don't seem to have an understanding of what the problem is? How can they solve it then? They have never succeeded using the combative approach, yet they refuse to change. Amazing!!!

I don't even dream these days(not even the 'wet' ones). But let me prophesy on this (Surely it doesn't take anything to do this): THE DECONGESTION EXERCISE WILL FAIL; YES IT WILL.
  Ato's Response  
  I don't need to say "Amen" to your prophecy because I know it will surely come to pass!
 
25. democracy
  06 Jul 2009 | 10:05 PM
  an article like this has been long expected... better than the comedies i have had to read in months... your points are quite tenable. but i also believe what must be done must be done. look here, my dear friend. average demand for goods and services is constant irrespective of these hawkers, it is in their best interest as well as ours that they move to appropriate places meant for them. i took a course on global sustainability by Professor Dale Whittington of the university of north carolina. and he shares the same view of proper decongestion of the city of accra since he has been in ghana before on world bank projects. a problem he says is very similar to lower Manhattan (new york) in the early 18 century until proper planning of the city was done with proper decongestion. please preach the good word, but also always as the expects advice on very important issues like this, because the mayor needs the support of the people to succeed.
 
26. non partisan
  07 Jul 2009 | 12:14 AM
  i very much disagree with you on this one ato..the argument that people need to earn a living otherwise they will turn to prostitution or armed robery doesn't wash.in developed countries, people don't hawk on the streets not because they don't want to or that they are earning enuf already but simply because there are LAWS and such laws don't permit it. hawkers should never have been there in the first place, so therefore they can't argue. they create a mess on the streets and also affect the movement of pedestrians. as someone already said, you can't steal and argue that u were hungry. the streets must be clean and free. its then that drainages can be constructed, then essential services like fire service and even ambulance can operate successfully
  Ato's Response  
  Last time I checked, Ghana was a poor developing country. Or has our status changed? When it suits your arguments (like in this case), you compare us with a developed country when it doesn't, like when people complain about poor education and health facilities, you compare us with the worst of the developing countries. This is sickening! Even in India - a middle income, developing country with a nuclear arsenal people sell on the streets and pavements.
 
27. Adowa
  07 Jul 2009 | 09:34 AM
  Ato! failing? Yes I know it will. Do I wish the city is less chaotic and more orderly? Yes. I however have different approach and I have held this opinion for years. In fact I have been praying that a president does that. With all the profligacy in his expenditure, I guess JAK had the credibility to do this: MOVE THE CAPITAL OUT OF ACCRA. I've proposed this to solve 3 problems: (1) to relieve the pressure on Ga lands (2) to make appropriate arrangement for land for the use of state that will not lead to the problems Ga lands are giving to the state (3) to engender "natural decongestion" of Accra.

Where do I propose we send the new Capital? Two proposals (1) Sene District of B/A or (2) Tain District of B/A. My preference is Sene. Tain is the second best. Ato just look at the map of Sene, check it against the population size. Every family can be adequately compensated for land lost to the state. Just take half of the land for the state. re-allocate the remaining half to all families and land owners. Compensate families adequately with cash, land re-allocation, houses and better education to school going kids in the area. This should make the magic.

Remember, Sene is beautifully interlaced with the Volta Lake.

  Ato's Response  
  That's thinking out of the box, baby! And I love it! Love it! Love it! Love it! You see, our problems in this country require that we think on a different and higher wavelength. The mayor of Accra is using old thinking that failed in the past to solve an old problem which is getting worse. What do you expect? Failure! And that's what he will get. Thank you, Adowa!
 
28. Inda
  07 Jul 2009 | 11:21 AM
  I have lived in DC and the UK too and that is not the norm, and ermmmm DC is not the capital of the world tsk tsk tsk. actually has a lot of squallidness, you wld be shocked - high power/white house juxtaposed with extreme poverty
 
29. Nissy
  07 Jul 2009 | 01:37 PM
  Ato dont forget these street hawkers generate the most filth in the central district. If they're there 24/7 can u imagine the amount of rubbish they'll generate and heap right there in the city? Trust me if these guys are sent away filth generated will be slashed down by half. Then Zoomlion can find a headway of clearing those rubbish and recieve money from appropriate persons(legal traders)without any hussle.

I can assure u these traders are a nuisance and must be sent away from the streets. Apart from the Vehicular and Human traffic they cause they pick pockets and bags. I SUPPORT THE DECCOGESTION EXCERCISE 100%. My only Prayer is that the AMA Boss will keep them off once and for all.
 
30. Wiredu
  07 Jul 2009 | 05:42 PM
  Ato you almost sound like you wish for this exercise to fail. Hawkers will become frustrated and begin to look at other options to make a living, if the mayor can sustain this exercise long enough. It just might succeed.
 
31. Guruool
  07 Jul 2009 | 08:33 PM
  Everyone one has a reason for doing something. What is wrong will always be wrong. You are trying to justify the disregard for the law because the people are in need. It is this same thinking with which the police take bribes cus their salary is not enough, teachers charge students extra to teach what they are supposed to teach, journalist take 'soli' to do their jobs and politicians take 10% of all contracts!

We all have a reason for doing what we do. If you stand for what is right, stand for it always and not some of the time.

Also the street vendors in DC sell at designated areas at specific times of the day and week (like weekends). They also require permit to even do this.
 
32. apology
  08 Jul 2009 | 09:42 AM
  Are you saying it is wrong to get rid of the hawkers off the pavement and streets Accra.Is it because i have a brother who sells to make a living by creating all this mess for pedestrians and motorist.I think they need to be cleared off the street but i agree with you for your suggestions that a place should be provided for them.
We always want to equalize ourselves to the "abrofo" the whites, we want to be like them,have nice and clean cities and towns like theirs yet we don't think as leaders like theirs.
If our leaders can think about the youth and act appropriately for just a week, it will do us good.
As your self are those people not paying TAX,yet their tax is being enjoyed by politricians for their Car loans and fat seating allowances to the extent of neglecting the youth.
Tell that Mayor and the current government that we said "Duah yede boo Banu ye be san so di abo Takyie".
Keep writing your Mind for people like myself will always listen to you.
Dream BIG it is less expensive.
Tell them your ADVISE is free of charge.
 
33. NII ODARTEI
  08 Jul 2009 | 10:59 AM
  WELL THE MAYOR HAS DONE IT RIGHT AND THINK PAS LIKE ATO SHOULD HAVE CONGRATULATED HIM THAN TO WRITE THAT BLADASH!WE MUST GIVE PRAISE/S WHEN IT'S DUE.ATO PLEASE TELL ME IF THE HAWKERS WERE TOLD TO HAWK IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREET OR PICTH HIS/HER TENT BY THE ROADSIDE? COME CLEAN WITH MY QUESTION!BESIDES THAT MAJORITY OF THOSE HAWKERS WHOM YOU ARE TRYING TO DEFEND ARE ALL FROM THE HINTER LANDS AND ARE A MAJOR CONTRIBUTING FACTOR/S ABOUT ACCRA BEING SO MUCH DIRTY SINCE THEY HAVE TO FIND THE MEANS TO SURVIVE AT ALL COST AT THE EXPENSE/S OF MAKING ACCRA DIRTY..I SUPORT THE MAYOR AND THESE FILTY FOLKS BE SENT PACKING TO WHERE THEY COME FROM AND DO ALL THAT DIRTY THINGS THERE AND ACCRA WILL REGAIN ITS BEAUTY.DONT PUT POLITICS IN THIS MATTER SINCE YOU WERE PART AND PARCEL OF THIS PROBLEM BY NOT FINDING OUT WHY THESE FOLKS LIKE TRADING IN THE STREET AND LIKE SLEEPING IN THE KIOSK BUT DONT DO THIS IN THEIR HOMETOWNS AND SINCE THEIR MAIN AIM OF COMING TO ACCRA IS TO MAKE MONEY THEY CARE LESS ABOUT HENCE WHAT WE FACING..ITS TIME A SPADE IS CALLED A SPADE
 
34. Nat
  08 Jul 2009 | 01:12 PM
  Ato,
Now that the hawkers have devised a new strategy to still sell their product on the streets, we shall all now see if the AMA boss can match the hawkers charlewatey for charlewatey.
 
35. ola dake
  08 Jul 2009 | 03:09 PM
  ato i completely disagree .all your solutions have been tried with the construction of markets in the various sub-metros .your suggestion to leave the hawkers on the streets till all is well .you speaks as though the AMA bye laws should not be enforced.it is this thinking that people should survive thats why we are where we are.you might as well advise that those who have built on water ways should be spared because of corruption at the town and country planning. otherwise these people will get into armed robbery .one american president said that there is nothing worse than a young pessimist.very soon joyfm your street will be taken over by hawkers if we continue with your line of thinking,that because of the ineptitude of the city authorities lets dig up a highway and build on it.and what has politics got to do with a semblance of order on our streets.whilst the city of london is placing pianos at certain parts of the city to ease the stress in the city we are still grappling with whether hawkers should be on the street.we might as well declare accra a big village then we can excuse ourselves of this hawkers thing.But if we call this capital a city we must as well have a semblance of it.that means compel the hawkers to other markets all over the city.It will interest you to know that their colleagues who sell in the markets are glad that this exercise was carried out because they dont have to kerb crawl.please lets help to even have a semblance of a "city" so called .thanks

ola dake
architect. oladake@yahoo.co.uk
 
36. KINGSLEY
  09 Jul 2009 | 08:33 AM
  Of all the articles you yet have written, this seems most unguided.How can you, who claim to be Ghana's most irreverent be so pessimistic? Its a big wonder the KIND of people who parade themselves to be in position to inform and otherwise educate the people of Ghana through the media. What do you think accounts for the flooding of the City?
 
37. Kofi S.
  09 Jul 2009 | 02:58 PM
  One thing that has stood out to me in reading these comments is the unwillingness to take criticism or alternative thoughts.

@ola dake. You most politely disagreed but your reasoning is no better. Like Ato said in response to an earlier comment, Accra as a city is not on the same wavelength of any developed city. As such your futile attempt of posing Accra as a village in comparison to London is irrelevant. We will always be a village in comparison to them as long as the terms developing and developed still apply.

I do not see Ato's solution as the most prime but I think there is some serious thought that should be given to the suggestion. First of all we cannot lay claim that there is direct causality between the number of sacked hawkers a and the increase in prostitution and or thievery; although it may seem logical enough.

In thinking out of the box. Adwoa has given a great suggestion. Rellocate the city! However, this means great financial implications for recreating infrastructure for this to happen. Money we do not have. It also does not eliminate the problem permanently because the hawkers will just immigrate to the new destination. However, what is thoughtful about the comment is the idea to be able to start from a new ground where we can actually build a planned city with the appropriate number and size of 'hawking sites' as Ato rightly suggests.

I do think however that some amount of decongestion is necessary at least to keep the hawkers from spilling over their allocated regions into places like Oxford street and other 'higher end areas' in an effort to keep the land value and businesses high. My suggestion therefore, with advice from Nissy, to match this move with infrastructure development to put in the necessary drainage and other important things you wish to see there.

I was waiting for someone to point out the sinful; you who so adamantly support the decongestion movement wrote your comments and bought things from these people as you left your offices. I dont know who that economist was talking about average demand but if the government thought about enforcing on both sides, there might be change. Here I mean, fining those who sell and those who, like you buy, thereby reducing both supply and demand. The economist would tell you that now you would have a lower equilibrium of the two curves. This will also result in less rubbish to collect, which another brilliant soul correlated with the number of hawkers as opposed to the number of irresponsible consumers.

This decongestion process WILL fail without out of the box thinking. It will fail because the hawkers will be gone for two weeks, tops. Thereafter, they will return slowly and in a year neither you nor Obama would not have known the difference. Decongestion takes A LOT of our resources and there is no point using resources if the process is not sustainable.

Please be open and respectful in your suggestions and criticisms. Make this a constructive discussion and not a destructive malicious attack based on theology.
 
38. yellow
  15 Jul 2009 | 10:31 PM
 
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39. Albert Mensah
  16 Jul 2009 | 12:09 PM
  I enjoy reading your pieces but this one paaa dier,it is below the belt.Are you saying that because people are jobless they should be allowed to sell on the streets and pavements?
Are streets not meant for vehicles and pavements for pedestrians?I beg, let's give the AMA the needed support.As to whether they succeed is another thing altogether,but hey!They are on the right path
 
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