I'm Not Foolish To Set Up Komenda Sugar Factory Without Plans For Raw Materials - John Mahama

I'm Not Foolish To Set Up Komenda Sugar Factory Without Plans For Raw Materials - John Mahama

 

 

Former President, John Dramani Mahama has accused the current government of also deliberately failing to operationalise Komenda Sugar Factor. The $35 million factory, built from an Indian EXIM Bank facility, has not worked since its commissioning in 2016. The factory was revamped to revive the local production of sugar,

 

thereby reducing the importation of the commodity. But the story has been different. The factory has failed to produce sugar and is currently rusting away. The ruling New Patriotic Party, the (NPP) says that John Mahama failed to make arrangements for the provision of raw materials before proceeding to establish the factory.

 

 

According to him, the Indian government had prevailed on them to get factory ready and later apply for funds to support the production of raw materials. Speaking in an interview on Cape FM in the Central Region as part of his thank you tour on Friday, Mr Mahama said that the current government has deliberately purposed against

 

 

applying for the funds. The Indian government offered to assist us with the project. We were also to set up the factory first and later apply for a $24 million support for for sugar cultivation from the Indian government. When this current government was elected, they indicated that the project was not among their priorities and therefore,

 

 

 

 

they didn’t apply for the funds, he said. I’m also not that foolish to also set up a factory and have no plan for the provision of raw materials. I knew what the vision was. It was to get the raw materials first, and when we start production, we would have already had a processing plant, he added. John Mahama says that if the National

 

 

Democratic Congress is re-elected into office in the 2024 polls, it will ensure the factory is operationalized, giving employment to many locals and reducing the country’s importation of sugar. The government says negotiations are ongoing for private investors to take over the factory. It says that the move is part of plans to revive the factory.