SOCIAL
North Gonja DCE leads Green Ghana Day in Daboya
The North Gonja District is endowed with a rich forest reserve that constitutes part of the Mole National Park. Wildlife resources have been especially important for the livelihood of people in rural areas.
Date Created : 6/14/2022 12:00:00 AM : Story Author : Ridwan Abubakari/Ghanadistricts.com
However in the process of utilizing these resources to meet a range of socio-economic needs, the wildlife resources of the District have been severely depleted.
According to the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), between 1990 and 2020, the World lost some One Hundred and Seventy-Eight Million hectares (178,000,000ha) of forests, almost the size of Libya.
The President of the Republic, Nana Addo Dankwa Akuffo Addo on Tuesday, Ist March 2022, launched the 2022 edition of "Green Ghana Day", with a commitment to planting some Twenty Million Trees (20,000,000) this year as part of the Government's aggressive afforestation and reforestation programme.
At Daboya in the North Gonja District of the Savannah Region, the District Chief Executive, Mr Adam Eliasu Bawa, marked the day with a key stakeholder engagement and public forum at the conference hall of the North Gonja Assembly Complex. The DCE explained and stressed on the need to support the government's afforestation and reforestation programme through planting trees.
The exercise went practical when the DCE planted tree seedlings on some designated points in the locality and tasked stakeholders, students, and the general public to replicate the same in their homes, workplaces, open environments, farm lands among others.
The project has been spearheaded by the Ministry for Lands and Natural Resources led by Lawyer Samuel Abu Jinapor, sector Minister and MP for Damongo Constituency.
The country's forests are one of the most important Natural resources required for our socio-economic development, regrettably across the world, the exploitation of forest resources has been very rampant, leading to substantial decline in the world's forest cover.