President John Agyekum Kufuor has announced that the Upper Denkyira District would be elevated to municipal status." /> Ghana Districts: A repository of all Local Assemblies in Ghana

NEWS ARCHIVE 2006 - 09


(DUNKWA-ON-OFFIN) UPPER DENKYIRA : Assembly gets municipal status

President John Agyekum Kufuor has announced that the Upper Denkyira District would be elevated to municipal status.

Date Created : 10/22/2007 9:36:54 AM : Story Author : GhanaDistrict.Com

President John Agyekum Kufuor has announced that the Upper Denkyira District would be elevated to municipal status.
   
He said the area, which has two constituencies, would be divided into two districts to make administration easier and effective. President Kufuor said this when he joined the chiefs and people of the Dunkwa-On-Offin to honour past heroes of the area as part of the 50th independence anniversary celebration.
     
He said the elevation of the district was in appreciation of its contributions to the development of the area and the country at large. The ceremony was celebrated on the theme "A nation which cannot honour its heroes is not worth dying for".
    
The President also inaugurated a market complex that has 63 lockable stores, a buruli ulcer treatment centre with a capacity to accommodate 40 patients at a time. He also unveiled the statutes of Odeefuo Boa-Amponsem III, Denkyirehene, the longest ruling chief in the area, and Nana Owusu Bori II, who instituted an educational fund for children and also built the Omanhene palace at Dunkwa-On-Offin in 1943 during his reign.
  
In all 20 personalities including Odeefuo Boa-Amponsem, who was installed in 1955, Professor Wireko-Brobbey, Prof. Christopher Ameyaw-Akumfi and Dr Erasmus Yao Klutse were honoured for their immense contributions to the development of the area and were presented with citations.
    
President Kufuor commended the chiefs for honouring their past heroes and called on the youth to learn from what their leaders had achieved. He said the youth should learn more about their culture and traditions rather than emulating foreign cultures blindly.
    
The President said the government had put in place a lot of incentives to improve the living conditions of Ghanaians and pledged that it would not rest on its oars but would make sure it met almost all their demands before he leaves office in 2008.
   
He said the government would continue to ensure the rule of law and good governance to enhance true democracy in the country, stressing that Ghana had now become the "envy of many African countries because of the peace prevailing in the country".

GNA