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Assembly destroys ‘tuo zaafi’ flour dried on pavement

 The Ayawaso East Munici­pal Assembly (AEMA) in the Greater Accra Region has de­stroyed over 200 kilogrammes of contaminated maize flour meant for the preparation of the local dish, ‘tuo zaafi’ for safety.

The environmental health officers seized contaminated flour, and properly disposed them off after they were in­formed that it had been dried on unprotected plastic sheets, mixed with sand, on pavements along the Kanda to Kawukudi Highway.

The flour had also been dried eight hours daily on the pavement with some angry pe­destrians walking through, and sometimes spitting on it.

They are also exposed to particles of smoke from ve­hicle exhaust fumes and worn out lorry tyre materials.

The Acting Municipal En­vironmental Health Officer, Mr Hamdawaiy Sheriff, said three persons had been held as suspects.

He said: “Their actions are dangerous to public health and safety. And they will surely re­ceive the necessary punishment as prescribed by the by-laws.”

Mr Sheriff said though an officer was nearly attacked by three ‘machomen’, the office was determined to stop the practice, and urged community members to give out informa­tion on such activities and play their watchdog roles well.

The Greater Accra Regional Environmental Health Direc­tor, Mr Douglas Tagoe, who had earlier directed the Munic­ipal Office to destroy the flour, said the contaminated flour when consumed could cause problems to the lungs, kidneys and liver.

“How can food handlers be selling on smelly and fly infested drains with executive officers, scholars and intelligent adults scrambling for positions in queues to buy ‘death’ for themselves,” he asked?

He said the Public Health Act 851 of 2012 and the District Assembly Bye-Laws frowned on such acts and that the of­fenders should be sanctioned.

Mr Tagoe said the citizens needed to be cautious of all health and environmental safety measures before buying food outside, particularly from food vendors around choked drains.

He said similar practices were ongoing at the various beaches, with some fishmongers drying fishes by the roadside and said it must stop.

Mr Tagoe noted that in farming areas, pepper and other vegetables were also dried on highways and sold to unsus­pecting customers.

He urged the populace to avoid such foodstuffs and report the practices to the Metropolitan, Municipal and District Environmental Health Offices for action.

Before the destruction of the flour, the Food and Drugs Au­thority (FDA) raised concerns about the practice and urged the perpetrators to stop drying the substance on the pavement but they shrugged off the cau­tion — GNA.

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