OneGhana Movement donates 40 bins to NCCE
OneGhAna Movement has donated 40 waste bins to the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) for waste segregation in basic schools. Given that sanitation is very critical to the NCCE, it has collaborated with the OneGhana Movement to educate young children, especially in basic schools, to inculcate the habit of proper waste disposal through its ‘A Clean Ghana, My Responsibility’ sanitation programme. Speaking at the official handing-over ceremony of the bins to the NCCE, Emily Kanyir Nyuur, executive secretary of the movement, emphasised that plastic waste is a big problem in Ghana; there is, therefore, the need to encourage waste segregation in the younger generation so that they can be agents of change. “Plastic waste takes about 500 years to decompose, and that is not very good for our environment so we encourage segregation of waste although it will take a while to boom,” she added. Ms Josephine Nkrumah, chairperson of the commission, said that th...