Recently squattercity has been commenting about Sodom and Gomorrah communities in Accra, which have been receiving a lot of attention from the Ghanaian government, but not in a positive way. Accra Metropolitan Assembly is currently in talks with local utilities to cut off water and electricity to these communities, beginning the process of demolition of these communities, The Daily Graphic states. In addition the government is trying to force people out of these communities, without providing adequate housing elsewhere. Here a Ghanaian academic voices frustration with the government's way of dealing with the problems in these communities.
This case brings up some interesting issues in how to deal with development in peri-urban and slum areas. Although it is relatively common for governments to tear down areas deemed to be 'slums', this causes massive problems for water and sanitation in the areas where these people move and usually ends up transferring other problems as well. Inevitably people from Sodom and Gomorrah will move to another community, or create a space to live, and these people will suffer from the same problems that used to plague them in their old communities. Failure to provide proper water and sanitation infrastructure will perpetuate the same sorts of livelihood, health, food, sewerage problems that previously existed.
Squattercity also has some interesting commentary on how the people of these communities have been labelled as "dirty" and have also been called a threat to national security. These posts highlight how squatter or informal communities suffer from social exclusion and are further marginalised because they reside in these poor areas, with no infrastructure, and very few public resources.
Governments need to find a way to deal with informal communities in a better way. Destroying homes and cutting off basic services (like water, sanitation, electricity) does not help to improve the lives of people in these communities and only creates more problems for governments to deal with in the future. This is not to target the Ghanaian government, similar situations have occurred in Brazil, Cambodia, Liberia, and elsewhere. It is more to raise the question of what are the aims of the governments in these situations? How do people get access to water in the interim period between eviction and settling, and how much do they pay? How does this affect water and sanitation in areas where people settle? And on informal settlements and water in general, can you justify charging people for water and water systems when they do not have a claim to the land they live on?
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