A post on the Facebook Page of the Minister for Youth and Sports, Hon.
Isaac Asiamah, with pictures, talks about a delegation he led to “Inspect the
Cape Coast Sports Stadium on Friday, August 16 to mark the commencement of
refurbishment works on key areas of the facility”.
According to the publication, apparently authored on behalf of or by the
Minister himself: “The maintenance agreement signed between the
Chinese and Ghanaian Governments also includes a training [programme] where
some Ghanaians would be skilled as permanent staff on the ground to maintain
the facility and the country’s other sporting infrastructures”.
Hon. Isaac Asiamah proceeds to express Ghana’s gratitude to the Chinese
Government for their support, while pointing out that, “A rigorous maintenance
culture will forestall the rapid infrastructure deterioration we have witnessed
in the past” in Ghana. While I read the Minister’s Facebook post, two things
engaged my mind.
First, our depressing maintenance culture and secondly, the state of
affairs at the Essipong Stadium in the Western Region. To start with, the mere
fact that, we will not allow the Cape Coast Stadium to deteriorate like the
Essipong Stadium before repair works begin, is laudable. Questions have to be
asked however as to when same will be done to the Essipong Stadium.
In June, the Director General of the National Sports Authority,
Professor Peter Twumasi, speaking on behalf of Hon. Asiamah at a forum of 120
leading actors in the sports industry in the Western Region, stated that,
rehabilitation works at the Essipong Stadium has been catered for in the new
six-year Ghana Sports Renaissance plan. It however did not say when the works
will actually start.
The renaissance plan was expected to be launched in July, according to a
Ghana News Agency report I read. I do not know whether indeed the plan was
launched. What is clear however is that, every day, the corrosion and general
deterioration of the Essipong Stadium enters a different phase. That is why our
sports authorities ought to be reminded that, the more we wait to breathe life
back into the dying Essipong facility, the greater we contribute to its ruin.
There is no question about the Government’s commitment to develop sports
infrastructure. I have my difficulties with Hon. Asiamah over the utterly
incongruous 2019 AFCON expenditure, not budget, whose details we still have not
seen or do not have. But, like or loathe him, the Minister, with the
construction of youth centres nationwide, is spearheading a project that will
surely give sports infrastructure in the country a decent facelift.
Will the maintenance approach to these youth centres, when completed, be
like that of the Essipong Stadium? I said earlier that, the commencement of
repairs at the Cape Coast Stadium is positive. We should not wait till it rots
before we assemble tools for rehabilitation. I therefore make a passionate
appeal to the Hon. Minister to turn his eye to the Essipong Stadium.
We enjoyed its usage in 2008 and the few years that followed. Now with
its torn, decaying roofing; broken seats, wrecked electrical fittings and
mold-infested stands; the Essipong Stadium looks like a decrepit, run-down
structure, which sadly tells a story, perhaps about the state if sports not
just in the Western Region but in the entire country. It is unacceptable.
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