
ComWelf
BAWKU DISTRICT
Ghana, West Africa


Bawku District is one of the most isolated, arid, and poorest
regions in Ghana. The Peace Corps has made it a priority to focus its efforts
in disadvantaged areas such as Bawku to more directly address the challenges
of poverty, and has assigned 32-year-old Susan Rosely to work as a community
development volunteer with the Community Welfare Foundation (COMWELF),
a local private development agency. Since arriving in late 1999, Susan has
assisted COMWELF
to design and implement programs. From the beginning, Susan saw a few of
the most successful small businesspeople owned heavy one-speed bicycles
that they used for productive purposes, such as the carrying of goods for
sale. Thus, Susan and COMWELF understood that bicycles were an economically
and culturally appropriate means of transport locally.
However, the majority of the population could not afford these expensive
imported items and continued to walk long distances to work, markets, schools,
and health clinics.
In March 2000, Susan and COMWELF approached Pedals for Progress requesting
a shipment of used bicycles and new spare parts and accessories, to capitalize
an innovative project aiming to generate employment and improve access to
work, markets, and health and education services in the Bawku region. Such
an undertaking is proposed to be financially
self-sustaining after the initial shipment, from the local sale of bicycles.
In her correspondence, Susan told us of a young, unnamed Ghanaian woman
who Susan thought typical of the potential beneficiaries of Pedals for Progress
assistance. Susan writes:
"Following an exchange of correspondence and submission of a proposal
by COMWELF, Pedals for Progress shipped its first container to COMWELF in
June 2000. The costs of the initial shipment were donated by the Friends
of Ghana, and a variety of individual
Returned Peace Corps Volunteers. "