Accra Under Water:Casualties Mount Amid Building Regulation Failures

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Accra has once again succumbed to its perennial vulnerability to flooding, with a heavy downpour on Sunday, 18 May, leaving at least three dead and thousands displaced.

The downpour, lasting close to three hours, exposed the capital’s inadequate drainage infrastructure and lax enforcement of building codes, triggering a familiar cycle of devastation.

Ella Esiman Nongo, the Municipal Chief Executive of the Adentan Municipal Assembly, confirmed the fatalities, noting the tragic loss of two individuals in the burgeoning suburb of Lakeside, including a young girl from Nanakrom, and another man in the vicinity of New Legon.

These casualties underscore the growing risks faced by residents in rapidly expanding areas often characterized by unplanned development.

The deluge inundated key commercial and residential areas, including Weija, Kaneshie, and Adabraka, rendering roads impassable and causing significant disruption.

The notorious Odaw drain, long a flashpoint for flooding, once again overflowed, overwhelmed by the sheer volume of water and accumulated refuse – a testament to persistent challenges in waste management and urban planning.

While rapid response teams managed to conduct rescues in areas like Ashiyie, Nongo pointedly stressed the urgent necessity for stricter adherence to building regulations, particularly within the Adentan municipality and the wider Greater Accra Region.

 Her remarks highlight a growing concern that unchecked construction in waterways and flood-prone zones is exacerbating the impact of seasonal rains.

Further assessments by the National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO) indicate that approximately 3,000 residents in the low-lying Odawna market area bore the brunt of the flooding.

 Nii Adjei Tawiah, the Municipal Chief Executive of the Korle Klottey Municipal Assembly, visited the affected area on Monday, acknowledging the extensive damage and promising swift intervention – a familiar refrain in the aftermath of such events.

Meanwhile, management at the privately developed Lakeside Estate offered a more nuanced explanation for the flooding in their vicinity.

They attributed the immediate cause to a constriction at a bridge linking Community Five and Six, allegedly due to the proximity of an oil filling station.

Their statement, while specific to their estate, implicitly raises broader questions about the impact of infrastructure development on natural drainage patterns and the potential for conflicts of interest in land allocation.

This latest flooding incident serves as a stark reminder of Accra’s ongoing struggle to manage rapid urbanization and its consequences.

Despite repeated pledges and post-disaster rhetoric, the underlying issues of inadequate infrastructure, poor urban planning, and weak enforcement mechanisms persist, leaving the city perpetually vulnerable to the destructive power of seasonal rains.

 The human cost, as tragically evidenced by the latest fatalities, continues to mount.

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