Diplomats fretted about Canadian funding for Ghana outdoor defecation campaign
TORONTO — Canadian diplomats felt the need to justify spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on a campaign aimed at reining in outdoor defecation in Ghana amid questions over the use of development money, internal documents reveal.
The public health sanitation project included a large, graphic billboard showing people squatting on a beach with the slogan, “Beaches are not toilets — Don’t do it here.” A government of Canada mark is strategically placed at the bottom alongside the logos of the Ghanaian government and of the UN aid program, UNICEF.
Documents obtained under access to information laws show the Canadian end of the file went quiet after the project launch in Ghana last fall until May, when a photograph of the billboard began circulating on social media.
“Canada is paying for signs in Ghana that tell people not to s–t on the beach,” a user by the handle of Karoumi tweeted in late May along with a photograph of the anti-defecation poster. “This is not a good use of our tax dollars.”