By Felix Engsalige Nyaaba
The
Leper Aid Committee (LAC) over the weekend put smiles on the faces of Lepers at
the Weija Lerporisium in Accra when it commissioned a three –bedroom house with
other facilities for the vulnerable.
The three bedroom house contained offices for
nurses, a store, Kitchen and washrooms and was put up by the Leper Aid
Committee in collaboration with Global Haulage Company limited.
The
commissioning of the house surprised many, especially the inmate of the
Leprosarium who never expected that they would ever get such a magnificent edifice
since their appeal to philanthropists over their dilapidated structures which
they had lived in for over 60 years have yielded no positive results.
The three
bedroom house with a large hall would accommodate Lepers to enable the
Committee to renovate the old structures which are all in a deplorable
condition for the inmates.
In an
address at a ceremony to commission the project, the Chairman for the Lepers
Aid Committee, Reverend Father Andrew Campbell said, the commissioning of the
three bed room for the Lepers was long overdue stressing that the inmates have
been living in bad condition for years and that it was time the society should
showed them love.
He said, the only thing the society could give to
the lepers was to provide them with suitable accommodation and other basic
necessities, so they could also live as humans.
According
to Rev. Fr Cambell, through fund raising, the Committee was able to raise an
amount of GH¢100 million while the Global Haulage Company Limited through an
appeal also donated GH¢60 million, to put up the facility.
He noted
that Leprosy is God making disease which any one could fall victim to and
called on Ghanaians , especially
philanthropists, organizations and other bodies to assist the Leper Aid Committee
to provide better living conditions for
the inmates in view of the fact that most of them are been neglected by their
family and relatives.
The
Chairman of the Lepers Aid Committee also stated that, the 26 pesewa susidey
provided to the inmate by the government was woefully inadequate and appealed
to government to consider increasing the subsidy so the lepers could sustain a
meaningful living.
The
lepers, according to Fr. Cambell, “Were given GH¢2.00 subsidy for three months
by the common fund and after that the inmate would have nothing to live on
either than the 26 pesewa.”
Mr. Andrew
Agyekum, Human Resource Manager of the Global Haulage Company Limited, said the
company was touched by the plight of the Lepers and has decided to do what it
could to make them live as part of human beings.
He said,
beside the company contribution in putting up the residential structure for the
Lepers, it would continue to support the inmate annually as part of the company’s
corporate social responsibility to make the living condition of the inmate better.
There were
also good will messages and cash donation from other Churches, organizations
and schools present to grace the occasion.
The Leper
Aid Committee later on disclosed that, on September 1, this year it would
organize a fund raising 10 km walk to
support the lepers , especially those in the Volta and Upper West regions .
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