Using
plastic to cook or store food is known to be extremely dangerous to
health as certain toxic substances are released into the food that are
harmful to the human body.
Mrs Cindy Badoe, Head of Built
Environment, Environmental Protection Agency, said when plastic was used
to cover food while cooking, toxins from the plastic were emitted into
the food which when eaten, could cause various sicknesses including
brain damage to humans.
Speaking at a seminar on Sanitation in
Accra on Tuesday, Mrs Badoe noted that the use of plastic, that started
in the mid 1990s for easy carriage of goods, had now become a major
cause of waste problem in Ghana with its many repercussions that had
overwhelmed most stakeholders.
The Young Women Christian
Association, (YWCA), a non-governmental organization, organized the
seminar to sensitise women on the sanitation situation within the
capital city and how to help “sanitise the environment”.
The
seminar, which was chaired by Mrs Rosemond Abraham, President, YWCA, was
attended by various women and church groups, market women and students.
Mrs Badoe educated the women on the environmental situation and said
waste generation, which kept increasing as the urban population
increased, had become serious issues for the state.
She said the
situation was compounded with the increasing usage of plastic films by
various food and beverage retailers throughout the country.
She
said the plastic bags, which do not biodegrade for 10,000 years, were
carelessly thrown away and got collected around the city, chocking
drains, threatening animals, damaging the soil and polluting the
environment.
Mrs Badoe, therefore, asked the public,
particularly women, to adopt a more positive habit by keeping their
surroundings clean and educate their children to do same.
Mrs
Esther Owusu, General Secretary, YWCA, said the insanitary situation
within the capital city was alarming and that necessitated the
organisation of the seminar to sensitise women on the situation and how
they could help to address the situation.
She said after the
seminar, various partners would be identified to help move around the
communities to propagate sanitation issues and to mobilize members to
clean their environment.
Mr Robert Kwaku Agyei, National
Environmental Sanitation Coordinator, Zoomlion, said the various waste
management companies would always partner citizens to keep a clean
environment.
He said Zoomlion, in partnership with the
Government, had established a waste composite site in Accra where waste
is being processed while another site had been acquired in Kumasi to be
developed and manage waste around the area. |
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