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Fri, 20 Feb 2026 Feature Article

An Open Letter to Our Northern Members of Parliament

An Open Letter to Our Northern Members of Parliament

To our Members of Parliament from Northern Ghana,

This letter comes from a place of concern, not hostility. It comes from lived reality.

Across the Northern regions of Ghana, many communities still struggle with poor road networks that become nearly impassable during the rainy season. Farmers lose produce because transport is unreliable. Pregnant women travel long distances on rough roads to reach health facilities. Students walk miles to school or study in structures that are barely fit for learning. Access to clean water remains inconsistent in several districts. Youth unemployment continues to rise, pushing many to migrate south in search of opportunity.

These are not emotional claims. They are visible conditions.

While other constituencies across the country see steady improvements in infrastructure, investment, and social services, many parts of the North remain behind in measurable development indicators. The gap in road infrastructure, industrial presence, and private sector investment between Northern Ghana and the southern corridor is well documented. Poverty rates in the Northern regions have historically remained among the highest in the country. That reality should command urgency.

Yet too often, public attention is drawn to political rivalries, party battles, and personal positioning rather than tangible development outcomes. Parliamentary representation is not about media appearances or internal political maneuvering. It is about advocacy, negotiation, and securing resources for the people who voted you into office.

Every opportunity on the floor of Parliament should count. Questions should be raised about stalled road projects. Pressure should be applied for hospital upgrades. Funds should be pursued for irrigation systems to support dry season farming. Technical and vocational institutions should be championed to address youth unemployment. These are the issues that directly change lives.

Representation must be measured by visible progress. Improved roads. Functioning schools. Equipped hospitals. Job creation initiatives. Expanded access to water and electricity. These are concrete benchmarks.

It is deeply frustrating when those entrusted with this responsibility appear more focused on partisan games than development priorities. Even more concerning is the pattern where Northern politicians continue to secure high-profile positions, yet the communities they represent remain largely unchanged. Leadership is not defined by titles. It is defined by results.

The North does not need rhetoric. It needs infrastructure. It does not need symbolic appointments. It needs investment. It does not need political drama. It needs measurable transformation.

This is a call for accountability.
A call for seriousness.
A call for performance that matches the weight of the mandate you carry.

The people of Northern Ghana deserve more than representation in name. We deserve representation that delivers.

By Victor Raul Puobabangna Plnace from Eggu in the Upper West Region of Ghana

#Puobabangna

Victor Raul Puobabangna Plance
Victor Raul Puobabangna Plance, © 2026

I am Victor Raul Puobabangna Plance, a development professional and storyteller from Eggu in Ghana’s Upper West Region. With experience in WASH, public health, emergency response, and community development, I’ve worked with organizations like Catholic Relief Services and World Vision Int. More I am Victor Raul Puobabangna Plance, a development professional, storyteller, and thinker from Eggu in the Upper West Region of Ghana. I carry with me the weight of real stories, the wisdom of a quiet upbringing, and a mission to use what I know to help others live with dignity, direction, and hope.

I have worked across public health, WASH, emergency response, and community development, partnering with organizations like Catholic Relief Services and World Vision International. I understand systems, but I do not get lost in them. I never forget the people behind the reports, the families behind the statistics, or the communities waiting to be seen and heard.

But I am not only a development worker. I am a writer. I write from the heart of where I come from. I write because some things are too true to be forgotten. I write about love and loss, silence and hope, absence and longing. From The Barber and the Boy Who Wouldn’t Smile to Family by Blood but Total Strangers in Reality, my stories reflect the pain we hide and the light we carry. I speak for the silent. I stand with the unseen.

My voice is raw, but it is real. I do not dress my words. I let them breathe. I do not rush for applause. I wait for impact. I believe in asking hard questions, even when the answers are slow or uncertain. I believe in doing good work even when no one is watching.

Whether I am mentoring a youth, writing for someone I may never meet, or simply walking the road less noticed, I carry a simple goal: to make meaning. To leave people better than I found them. To speak the truth in a world that often prefers silence.

This is not just what I do. This is who I am.
Column: Victor Raul Puobabangna Plance

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here." Follow our WhatsApp channel for meaningful stories picked for your day.

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