Storm damage in Gushegu disrupts education, displaces families
A powerful rainstorm has left a trail of destruction in Gushegu District, tearing through schools and homes and deepening already fragile conditions in the area’s education sector.
The storm, which struck last Wednesday, damaged more than six schools and about 200 houses, displacing families and forcing many pupils out of their classrooms. In several cases, teaching has been relocated to open spaces, with lessons now being held under trees after roofs were ripped off school buildings.
Among the hardest-hit institutions are Gaa Kindergarten and Primary, Limo Primary, Digbila Primary, Zinindo Primary, Gushegu Senior High School, and the Gushegu Nursing and Midwifery Training College, all of which sustained varying degrees of structural damage.
The Member of Parliament for the area, Alhassan Tampuli, said the disaster had compounded existing challenges in the district, particularly within the education sector, where some schools already operate with only one teacher.
He warned that the destruction could further undermine teaching and learning if urgent interventions are not undertaken, noting that the district’s limited educational infrastructure is now under severe strain.
Residents who lost their homes are also grappling with displacement, as families seek temporary shelter while awaiting assistance. The scale of destruction has heightened concerns about the vulnerability of communities in the area to extreme weather events.
A victim, Alhassan Yussif, appealed to the government, non-governmental organisations and benevolent individuals to come to their aid to help rehabilitate the affected schools and homes.
He said the situation could disrupt the academic calendar and further worsen already fragile educational conditions in the district if urgent steps were not taken to address it.
The incident adds to a growing pattern of weather-related damage in parts of northern Ghana, where infrastructure deficits often magnify the impact of such disasters.
