Must Ghanaians Be Told What to Do? Why Cleanliness Is a Daily Duty, Not an Anniversary Spectacle

The Crisis of the Ghanaian Conscience and the Failure of Leadership

No sane adult needs a national radio broadcast to remind them to brush their teeth, take a bath, or flush a toilet. These are instinctive, routine habits of civilized human beings. Yet, the moment Ghanaians step out of their front doors, our collective sense of decency and civic pride utterly vanishes. Let us stop sugarcoating the truth: Ghana does not have a sanitation problem; it has a citizenship problem compounded by a catastrophic collapse of local governance.

We have reduced basic hygiene to a ceremonial event—a cheap public relations stunt reserved for ministerial declarations, national sanitation days, and television cameras. True civilization is what citizens do when nobody is watching. The day we stop treating cleanliness like an annual anniversary and start treating it as a non-negotiable daily obligation is the day our nation will truly transform. We do not need a single new law. Our local assembly bylaws are already gathering dust in lavish municipal offices. What we need is an end to the laziness, the filth, and the toxic mentality that someone else—whether the government or Zoomlion—must clean up after us at every step, while overpaid local authorities look on with absolute apathy.

The Hotspots of Ignominy: Choking Under the Watch of Failing Assemblies

Look across our major urban centers, and the story is the same: absolute environmental lawlessness met with total indifference from the political elites running our local assemblies.

The Core Realities of Our Sanitation Decay

To understand why our cities are suffocating in garbage, we must confront the uncomfortable truths about our current societal attitudes and political cowardice:

Strategic Recommendations and Suggestions

We cannot beg, plead, or pray our way into a clean country. Change will only happen when bad behavior meets immediate, painful consequences, and when local assemblies are forced to do the jobs they are paid for:

A Call to Mature Citizenship and Accountable Leadership

A nation that requires occasional announcements to remind grown adults to clean their surroundings is a nation in a state of moral and civic regression. Keeping Ghana clean is not a task we can outsource to a contractor, nor is it a favor we do for the government. It is the basic price of admission for living in a civilized society.

We must shatter the illusion that filth is someone else’s problem to solve. Our local assemblies must wake up from their slumber, stop coddling lawbreakers for votes, and ruthlessly enforce the bylaws. Until we accept that cleanliness is a personal, daily, and quiet obligation, Ghana will remain trapped in dirt, regardless of how many new laws we pass. True patriotism starts with the trash you refuse to drop on the ground, and true governance starts when assemblies punish those who do.

✍️ Retired Senior Citizen
For and on behalf of all Senior Citizens of the Republic of Ghana 🇬🇭

Teshie-Nungua
akpaluck@gmail.com

A Voice for Accountability and Reform in Governance

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