The 2018 Anti-Bushfire Campaign is on the theme 'Our Future Depends on Sustaining the Environment'
The Upper West Regional Director of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Mrs Zenabu Wasai-King, says bushfires have reduced soil fertility, destroyed farm produce and lowered general agricultural output thereby exposing the Region to hunger.
She said bushfires, over the years, had been identified as one of the major challenges to the socio-economic progress of the savanna ecology in which vegetation and food crops were consumed perennially by bush fires.
She said the problem did not only affect the biodiversity in the Region but depleted productivity of the soil thereby exposing the savanna region to food insecurity.
Mrs Wasai-King was speaking during the launch of the 2018/2019 Anti-Bushfire Campaign and inauguration of 215-member Bushfire Volunteer squads for the Baayiri and Kataa communities in the Upper West Region.
It was on the theme: “Our Future Depends on Sustaining the Environment, Let Us Prevent Bushfires Now”.
“Protecting the natural savanna ecology is important since most of the people’s livelihood depend on the natural environment,” she said.
“Management of bushfires is a shared responsibility, which requires our collective efforts as a people to address.”
Mrs Wasai-King urged traditional rulers to use their “respected” positions as custodians of the lands to contribute to the fight against indiscriminate bush burning.
- For immediate assistance in fire outbreaks, dial our local numbers – Fire Service
- Fire destroys wooden structures at Madina Ritz junction
- How angry members of a feuding faction at Madina Ritz Junction allegedly set community on fire
- 28-year-old woman burnt to death at Madina-Ritz Junction
- Fire Service douse blaze in wig shop near GCB Bank Makola branch
- Read all related articles