Member of Parliament for Manhyia South, Nana Agyei Baffour Awuah, has raised alarm over the rapid and unregulated commercialisation of residential areas within the constituency.
Speaking on Luv FM, the MP warned that well-known residential neighbourhoods, including Ashtown and Alabar, are steadily being converted into commercial hubs—a development he described as “proper decadence.”
He said the trend reflects systemic planning failures at the national level.
“It tells you that there is growth in business, but it also tells you that we are not planning as a country. It doesn’t happen anywhere that residential areas become industrial areas unless there is rezoning. So, in the absence of rezoning, it represents what the country has become,” Mr. Awuah stated.
The MP linked the issue to what he described as decades of neglect of the Ashanti Region, noting that the standard of urban management in Kumasi has declined significantly over the years.
He argued that leaders in the region lack the resources and focus to effectively discharge their responsibilities, adding that broader systemic changes are also undermining governance at both the regional and city levels.
“Too many things are changing that are affecting how we are managing the country, particularly the region and the city of Kumasi,” he said.
Nana Baffour Awuah also warned of the long-term consequences of inaction, suggesting that Manhyia South could eventually lose its residential character entirely, except for a few communities such as Dichemso, CPC, and Krobo Odumase.
“Ashanti Newtown and other places are becoming markets. I am even scared that over time, Manhyia South as we have come to know it may not exist,” he cautioned.
While acknowledging that the surge in commercial activity reflects economic growth, the MP stressed that development without deliberate planning is counterproductive.
“Development is deliberate; you don’t leave it to happen on its own,” he emphasised.
He also criticised local government and city authorities, accusing them of treating building permits as a revenue-generation tool rather than a mechanism for ensuring proper urban development.
“Here, a permit is just a revenue generation mechanism by our city authorities,” he said, calling for a fundamental rethink of how building approvals are granted and enforced.
He urged relevant authorities to act urgently and creatively to address the situation without placing an undue financial burden on the state.
“The time has come for all of us to now do the hard thinking, to find very creative ways to do things at a very cheaper cost to this country,” he concluded.
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