Regional News of Friday, 9 October 2015

Source: GNA

Mahama announce measures to reduce traffic congestion

President John Dramani Mahama on Wednesday announced measures government was putting in place to reduce road traffic congestion.

He said road traffic in the country had moved from 40,000 a few years ago to 400,000 and government needed to take immediate steps to check the trend in the coming years.

President Mahama who was addressing the Bordeaux Chamber of Commerce as part of his week-long official visit to France, said Ghana was on the verge of acquiring a new national air carrier which would ply the West African sub-region before moving out to other continents.

Apart from that, President Mahama said government was also developing higher occupancy buses to commence the Bus Rapid Transit system which would pick passengers on schedule rather than the current situation where vehicles picked passengers haphazardly.

Government, he also announced, was working around the clock to implement light tramp transport in the major cities to reduce traffic congestion and time spent on road transport.

President Mahama said government was also improving the existing airports and establishing more aerodromes to facilitate air movement, which would subsequently reduce congestion on the major roads in the country.

On coffee plantation, President Mahama announced that government would revamp the coffee industry as a supplement to cocoa production.

As a result, he announced that government was targeting the Central Region that had comparative advantage in the production of the commodity, and would supply the Region with improved coffee seeds to step up production.

The President announced that government was working closely with the Colombian government to provide technical support in the massive production of coffee in the coming years.

Coffee production, he said, would provide an alternative to cocoa production that was ongoing in six out of the country’s 10 Regions.

He gave the assurance that government would continue to create fertile grounds for investors but urged prospective investors to always adhere to their side of the bargain in order not to go against the dictates of the law.