/**/ Power reestablished to shops at New Kejetia Market after disagreement regarding installment of bills Power reestablished to shops at New Kejetia Market after disagreement regarding installment of bills
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Power reestablished to shops at New Kejetia Market after disagreement regarding installment of bills

 


Power has been reestablished at the New Kejetia Market after it was detached on Wednesday. 

Around 7,200 shops at the office were influenced by the detachment work out. 

For quite a long time, the dealers, and the administration of the office have had conflicts over the installment of power bills.

This prompted them boycotting the installment of administration charges for force, sterilization and fumigation.

As indicated by them, until each shop at the market is given an individual meter, no merchant will cover any bill to the administration of the market. 

Plain Antwi, the Chairman of the Concerned Central Market Traders Association, said the merchants were disappointed with the absence of progress. 

"For right around a year currently, we've not had any reaction, so we chose to quit paying our administration charges to motion toward the authority to carry the meters to us," he clarified. 

Responding to the issue, the executives of the Kumasi City market, prevalently known as the new Kejetia market, said plans are set up to address the worries.

The Managing Director of the office, Edmund Kofi Duffour Addae, is anyway interesting to the dealers to cancel their choice not to take care of the bills as the market hazards closing down in case there is no cash to run it. 

He guaranteed that the board will meet to endorse an agreement for new meters. 

"On a basic level, the board has concurred. It involves doing some due constancy and getting data and comprehension from the ECG." 

"Bills up to the furthest limit of April which have been extraordinary are a little over GH¢700,000 and from May to the furthest limit of September, it is about GH¢55.7 million. That is enormous, and we have been paying for this for some time, however we can't pay any more," Mr. Addae said.

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