Deputy Minister of Sanitation and Water Resources, Patrick Boamah, has said that the national sanitation campaign launched by the President last month requires more determination and activism from Ghanaians in order for its aims and objectives to be achieved.

The  National Sanitation Campaign was launched as part of measures by the government to improve the sanitary conditions in the country, especially in the national capital, Accra.


The move was to prevent the recurrence of disease outbreaks like the cholera epidemic that killed a number of people in 2014.

“It is not an event, it is a process, and I believe a lot of effort has to go into advocacy, in terms of physical work on the ground, in terms of people changing their attitude towards sanitation. So it is a process,” he said.

Speaking to the press, the Deputy Minister rejected the suggestions that government is only wasting taxpayers’ money by launching such a campaign.

“I believe we can well measure it maybe within a year or so to find out whether the launch has achieved its aims and objectives,” he said.

He noted that national sanitation campaign is not a duplication of National Sanitation Day, explaining that the newly-launched campaign is more involving.

He explained that the campaign encompasses a lot of things, and it’s a process that is going to go throughout the whole year, unlike the National Sanitation Day which is just once in a month.

source:Citifmonline