Motorway-Interchange to the East Traffic Gridlock!
On Saturday, 24th February 2024, a group of us travelled from Accra to Dzodze on the Ghana-Togo border for what has graduated into a Ghanaian weekend pastime! We went to the funeral of a bereaved colleague.
Knowing the heavy traffic at the Tema-Motorway Interchange-Dahwenya- Miotso route, we left home before 6 am.
Still, that was not good enough to escape the heavy east-bound gridlock.
It was the return trip I found annoying. Having arrived at Central-University, Miotso around 4 pm, we crawled an unbelievable 300 metres in 30 minutes towards Daenya.
In my frustration I found myself asking a question I think Joy FM’s Raymond Acquah deserves a copyright for – “What is wrong with us (Ghanaians)?” For years, the traffic jam in the mentioned area has been talked about and written about, without any solution but rhetoric! Indeed, my September 2021 article titled “Road Traffic Indiscipline, traffic lights,” stated as follows.
QUOTE
Over the last weekend of August 2021, I had a feel of what those who live around Prampram, Dawhenya and Tema Community-25 experience on a daily basis commuting the short distance between the Tema-Motorway-Interchange and the Prampram-Junction.
The one hour it took me to cover the 18km stretch both ways on my outbound trip to Keta on Friday and on my return to Accra on Monday was considered very good by frequent travelers on that route. It takes two hours at times, they said.
On one occasion, it took my “Manager,” (Mrs Frimpong) three hours from the Prampram-Junction to the Motorway-Interchange on her way back home from a funeral. The question is, why should it take over an hour to travel 18km? Indiscipline!
Before describing the indiscipline I saw at work, I will share the experience of a friend on that same Friday, August 27, 2021
“Auntie” left home in Tema at 7.30 a.m. on Friday, early enough to get to Ada, only 90km away by 9 a.m. for a funeral.
She eventually got to Ada at 3 p.m. after being caught in a traffic gridlock between the Tema-Motorway-Interchange and Prampram-Junction.
Frustrated, Auntie spent only an hour at Ada. Setting off at 4 p.m., she arrived at Tema at 10 pm after six hours, as would have taken her to fly from Accra to London! Justifiably upset, Auntie swore never to make a return trip to Ada again!
The French philosopher Voltaire said, “Man is rational in that he can think, not in that, he thinks.”
Drivers dangerously crisscrossing/zigzagging their way for advantage on that 18km Motorway Interchange – Prampram-Junction stretch and creating gridlocks lends credence to Voltaire’s assertion.
 The two choke points are the crossroad at the Kpone-Junction/Kpone-Barrier and the Prampram-Junction.
Here, all known norms of human decency, respect and commonsense are thrown overboard.
Animalistic aggressiveness takes over with four or more lanes created as road shoulders are converted into roads.
I am told the only time order prevails is when the police are there. Elsewhere in other jurisdictions, traffic flows without the police always directly intervening.
 So, what is wrong with us?
Traffic lights
The question is, why have traffic lights not been installed at this important Kpone-Barrier crossroad all these years?
Obviously, the police cannot be there all the time to control human indiscipline.
With Accra expanding eastwards to Prampram and beyond, for how long should we depend on the police to check our indiscipline?
In any case, the road heading east from the Motorway-Aflao-Togo is part of the Trans-West-African Highway! So, why do we blatantly advertise indiscipline to foreigners?
Incidentally, the situation is no better west of Accra from Kasoa to Winneba!
So, how come anytime there is a major accident as occurred at Dompoase, Komenda-Junction with 35 deaths in January 2020, state officials troop there and make promises to “dualise” all trunk roads in Ghana (like the Motorway in 1965), only to wait for another accident to make the same pronouncement?
While the Ministry-of-Roads-and-Highways cannot solve all highway problems at once, please consider urgently the installation of traffic lights at the Kpone-Junction, as a free flow of traffic will have a multiplier-effect on traffic from Accra- Motorway Interchange-Tema- Ada-Aflao.
However, the fact is that, our singe-lane “face-me, I-face-you” trunk-roads are outmoded and contribute immensely to road traffic accidents.
As far back as 1965, the Accra-Tema-Motorway was built by President Nkrumah as a prototype to be replicated initially for the “Golden Triangle” of Accra-Kumasi and Sekondi-Takoradi.
After over 50 years of use with little maintenance, it is now a death trap.
MP accidents
In August 2021, two MPs were involved in road traffic accidents. Showing no sympathy whatsoever, some Ghanaians angrily stated rather uncharitably that, it was a travesty of justice that they survived, considering how little they in authority care about the thousands of Ghanaians who die annually in road traffic accidents.
Indeed, the police MTTD’s report on September 2, 2021, on road traffic accidents showed 1,900 Ghanaians died between January – August 2021, mainly through driver-indiscipline.
No wonder how disappointed Ghanaians feel about uncaring authorities! Remember Poet John Dryden’s quote, “beware the fury of a patient man!”
Finally, while drivers must drive with commonsense, where is the National Road Safety Authority in light of the carnage on our roads?
UNQUOTE
Discussion
Has any agency calculated the man-hours lost/fuel wastage as Ghanaians commute daily from Kasoa in the west, Prampram in the East and the Akwapim Mountains to the north, to Accra daily? Perhaps, even worse is the health effects from stress!
When radio discussions started on 1 March 2024 on the “Ghana Month” programme, a frustrated caller, after cataloguing all the ills including the dishonesty/lies/arrogance/disrespect and the general leadership failure, concluded by saying we should go back for the colonialists to rule us! Sadly, this view appears to have gained traction as Ghanaians responded saying, “but is it not true?” Osagyefo Dr Kwame Nkrumah must be crying in his grave.
Leadership, lead by example! Fellow Ghanaians WAKE UP!
Brig Gen Dan Frimpong (Rtd)
Former CEO, African Peace Support Trainers Association
Nairobi, Kenya
Council Chairman
Family Health University College,Â
Accra
Hmm
Hmmm