‘Razed’ UCC’s Jumapo Abandoned GH₵ 14 Million Satellite Campus burnt down

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A wildfire has wreaked havoc at the abandoned University of Cape Coast (UCC) satellite campus located at Jumako in the Eastern Region, Dailymailgh.com can report.

It is unclear what caused the fire at the project site but residents say the ravaging fire caused significant damaged to the project.

According to some residents who spoke to this to us (Dailymailgh.com) after the unfortunate incident few days ago, the satellite campus was awarded to a contractor at a sum of over GH₵ 14 million and work was progressing smoothly.

They alleged that the university led by the former Vice Chancellor, Prof. Joseph Ampiah Ghartey strangely abandoned the project without reasons given to the residents.

The University was to build the three-storey regional study centre for continuing education students at Jumapo, near Koforidua, in the New Juaben Municipality.

The project, according to our sources which was expected to be completed in 30 months, would’ve included 13 lecture halls, three laboratories, a library and reading centre, an ICT centre and 10 offices, as well as a lift to ensure disability friendliness.

The angry residents, said the chief of the area, Nana Kwame Oppong-Owusu III was not happy about the development and is now threatening to reclaim the land for farming purposes if nothing was done immediately about abandoned the project.

They said, he had already called on the Education Minister to ensure the abandoned project was completed, since it would bring a lot of economic activities to the community but that appears to have fallen on deaf ears hence his threat to reclaim the land.

“We were expecting the new Governing Council of the University Chaired by Prof. Obeng Mireku who doubles as the President of Wisconsin International University College, Ghana, to use his vast experience to ensure that the contractors return to site and complete the abandoned projects but they also appear to be unconcerned about the project.

We thought that Prof. Mireku has the ability and skills to provide strategic direction and leadership at the highest level of management and could therefore liaise with the Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Johnson Nyarko Boampong to complete the abandoned projects but that too seems not to happening, one of the residents, Mr. Frank Adjei said disappointedly.

Recently, the chief and residents of Zuarungu in the Bolga East District of the Upper East Region and Upper West Region had equally asked the Ministry of Education to compel the University of Cape Coast (UCC) to complete its abandoned Satellite campuses in their respective regions or they would reclaim their lands for farming purposes.

The residents, in separate interviews, expressed disappointment about the way the University had neglected the Satellite campus projects initiated by the former Vice Chancellor, Prof. Domwini Dabiri Kuupole’s administration since 2017.

They alleged that the projects were awarded to various contractors and works started smoothly under the former Vice Chancellor have all been abandoned when Prof. Joseph Ghartey Ampiah took over the affairs of the university.

Some of them have questioned the reasons why the immediate past Vice Chancellor, Prof Ampiah decided to abandon such praiseworthy projects that the university started before he was appointed.

The concerned residents stated that, the issue of the abandoned projects by the University for the past few years now, has been a cause of concern to them and therefore, it was time for the Education Minister to step in and make sure those projects were completed to stop distance learning students from travelling from these regions to Cape Coast for educational reasons.

The residents also noted that completing those projects will not only give distance learning students their peace of mind but will also provide jobs for the locals within those areas.

They accused the University of causing financial loss to the state, for which those responsible must be made to provide answers and explain why the projects had been abandoned for the past five years.

When this Dailymailgh.com visited the Zuarungu project site which was awarded to a contractor in 2015 at the cost of about GH₵ 13 million has since been abandoned even though it was 80 percent complete.

The huge three-storey building project which was almost at a completion level is now at the mercy of rains and has become a den for reptiles and over-grown weeds. A close look at it, showed some portions of it rotting gradually away.

Accor to the residents, reasons as to why the project which brought them smiles and hopes of also having a Satellite campus in their district have not been given to them and described the University’s action as unfair to the people of the area and the Bolga East District as a whole.

It will be recalled that the 2020 Auditor General’s (AG) report also revealed that the same University of Cape Coast (UCC) has abandoned 14 projects valued at GH¢78.9million, funded from Internally Generated Fund (IGF) – with most of them left for about eight years.

The report said seven of the projects, which were delayed and abandoned in the bush and between the completion stages of 87-99 percent, had damaged air-conditioners, broken windows, rotten door-frames and other forms of severe deterioration.

Further reviews disclosed that the University’s College of Distance Education spent almost GH¢3million on hiring conference rooms for training due to a five percent delay in completing a designated training centre – a training resort and conference centre at Agona Nyakrom for the university.

While the AG has indicated that value for money was not achieved from the total amount of GH¢78.9million spent on the projects, it blames the university’s directorate of physical development for not ensuring the contractors worked on time to deliver the projects.

Some of the projects include construction of the School of Agriculture Complex; a 3-storey project for the School of Graduate Studies; Science Faculty Annex; School of Business building; student union complex; a 1-storey student study structure for School of Medical Sciences; a classroom block, administration block and library block, a laboratory and an estate road – all for the School of Medical Sciences, and many other projects outside the university campus.

The AG strongly recommended that management of the university should ensure early completion of the projects to save them from further deterioration. The AG also urged the university to investigate the cause of delays to enable it enforce its rights under the construction contract where applicable.

Source: Daily Mail GH

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