Thursday, 02 October

AMA orders Sat Oct 4 closure of shops for First National Sanitation Day after presidential launch

News
AMA executives engaging with shop owners at a market

The Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) has directed all shops and markets within the metropolis to remain closed on Saturday, October 4, 2025, from 6 AM.

The directive, the assembly said, was to allow for the first official clean-up exercise under the newly launched National Sanitation Day.

In a statement signed by the Head of Public Affairs, Gilbert Nii Ankrah, the assembly explained that the directive follows the President John Mahama’s launch of the initiative and was in line with the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (Communal Labour) Bye-Laws, 2017, enacted pursuant to section 181 of the Local Governance Act, 2016 (Act 936) which mandates the Assembly to observe the first Saturday of every month as a National Sanitation Day.

According to the release, the exercise formed part of efforts to rid the city of filth, promote public health, and deepen shared responsibility for a cleaner, safer, and more resilient Accra. 

“This citywide exercise is being undertaken to reduce flooding, environmental health risks, and improve sanitation across the metropolis,” the statement noted.

The assembly further disclosed that all elected members would organise and lead simultaneous clean-up activities across their electoral areas so that work proceeds in a coordinated and efficient manner adding that the operation would cover all sub-metropolitan areas, with intensified work expected in Agbogbloshie, Tuesday Market, Kwame Nkrumah Interchange and its environs, Kwasiadwaso, and Kaneshie Market, where teams would desilt major drains, clear refuse, and tidy market precincts.

The AMA urged residents, traders, shop owners, and stakeholders to strictly comply with the directive by observing the temporary closure and actively participating in the exercise. 

It cautioned that public health officers would be deployed across communities to monitor compliance and enforce the directive.

The statement warned that failure to comply constituted an offence punishable on summary conviction by a fine of up to 100 penalty units or imprisonment of not less than 30 days and not more than six months, or both.

AMA added that continuing offences would attract an additional daily penalty.

Source: classfmonline.com