
Ghana's VP Joins National Clean-Up to Fight Flooding
Vice President Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang rolled up her sleeves alongside government staff for Ghana's nationwide sanitation drive. Her message: one-day clean-ups won't cut it anymore.
Ghana's Vice President didn't just talk about clean streets on Friday. She grabbed supplies and joined staff at Jubilee House to show that tackling flooding starts with picking up trash together.
Professor Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang participated in the July 10 nationwide clean-up exercise, working side by side with officials and citizens. Her presence sent a clear signal that keeping Ghana clean is everyone's job, not just something for sanitation workers to handle alone.
The Vice President praised participants for their energy and dedication during the exercise. But she also delivered an important reality check: cleaning up once won't solve Ghana's flooding and sanitation problems.
She urged Ghanaians to make cleanliness a daily habit, not a special occasion. That means keeping drainage systems clear, maintaining clean surroundings year-round, and staying vigilant about waste disposal.

Her call for sustained action comes as Ghana grapples with recurring flooding challenges. Clogged drains and poor waste management have contributed to devastating floods that displace families and damage property during rainy seasons.
The Ripple Effect
When leaders join community clean-ups, it changes the conversation from blame to partnership. This nationwide exercise brought together government officials, institutions, and ordinary citizens in a shared mission.
Ghana's sanitation challenges won't disappear overnight, but collaborative efforts like this create momentum. Clear drains mean fewer flooded homes. Clean streets mean healthier communities. And when Vice Presidents show up with cleaning supplies, it reminds everyone that no job is too small in service of the nation.
The exercise reflects a growing recognition across Ghana that environmental challenges require collective solutions. Communities that maintain clean surroundings throughout the year see fewer flooding incidents and improved public health outcomes.
By working together across all levels of society, Ghanaians are building resilience against future disasters while creating cleaner, safer neighborhoods today.
Based on reporting by Myjoyonline Ghana
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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