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Savannah Region
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The Savannah Region is one of the newest regions of Ghana and the largest region in the country. The creation of the Region follows presentation of a petition by the Gonja Traditional Council, led by the Yagbongwura Tumtumba Boresa Jakpa I. Upon receiving favourable responses from all stakeholders in the Northern Region (the region it was broken off from), the Brobbey Commission (the Commission tasked with the creation of the new regions), a referendum was conducted on the 27th December 2018.[5] The result was a resounding yes of 99.7%. The President of the Republic of Ghana signed and presented the Constitutional Instrument (CI) 115 to the Yagbonwura in the Jubilee House, Accra on 12 February 2019. The launch was well attended by sons and daughters of Gonjaland including all current and past Mps, MDCEs and all appointees with Gonjaland descent. Damongo was declared the capital of the new Savannah Region.[6] It is located in the north of the country. The Savannah Region is divided into 7 districts; Bole, Central Gonja, North Gonja, East Gonja, Sawla/Tuna/Kalba, West Gonja, North East Gonja and 7 Constituencies; Bole/Bamboi, Damongo, Daboya/Mankarigu, Salaga North, Salaga South, Sawla/Tuna/Kalba and Yapei/Kusawgu.[7][8] The capital of Bole district is Bole; East Gonja municipal is Salaga; West Gonja district is Damango; Sawla Tuna Kalba district is Salwa; Central Gonja is Buipe; North Gonja is Daboya; and North East Gonja is Kpalbe[9]
Key Information
History
[edit]Prior to the 2016 Ghanaian general election, the then candidate Nana Akufo-Addo declared that when elected, he would explore the possibility of creating new regions out of some of the existing regions in Ghana in order to bring government closer to citizens.
The execution of plans for the creation of the regions was seeded to the newly created Ministry of Regional Reorganization and Development[10] which is under the leadership of Hon. Dan Botwe. Government of Ghana ministry charged with the responsibility of supervising the creation of new regions in Ghana.[10] In March 2017, the ministry sent the blue print for the creation of the region along with others to the Council of State. The council met over 36 times from the time of submission to August 2017.[11]
The final stage for the creation of the region will be decided through a referendum by the people within the catchment of the new region.[12]
A referendum on 27 December 2018[13] approved the creation of Savannah Region, with 206,350 (99.52%) votes in favour on a turnout of 81.77%.[14][15][16] CI 115 establishing the Region signed and presented on 12 February 2019.[17]
Geography and climate
[edit]Location and size
[edit]The Savannah Region is bordered on the north by the Upper West region, on the west by the Ghana-Côte d'Ivoire international border, on the south by the Bono and Bono East regions, and on the west by the North East and Northern regions. Savannah region is made up of 7 districts.
Health facilities
[edit]Climate and vegetation
[edit]The Savannah Region is much drier than southern areas of Ghana, due to its proximity to the Sahel, and the Sahara. The vegetation consists predominantly of grassland, especially savanna with clusters of drought-resistant trees such as baobabs or acacias. Between December and April is the dry season. The wet season is between about July and November with an average annual rainfall of 750 to 1050 mm (30 to 40 inches). The highest temperatures are reached at the end of the dry season, the lowest in December and January. However, the hot Harmattan wind from the Sahara blows frequently between December and the beginning of February. The temperatures can vary between 14 °C (59 °F) at night and 40 °C (104 °F) during the day.
Tourism & Parks
[edit]
- Mole National Park
- Salaga slave market and wells
- Bui National Park[19] (now defunct due to Bui National Dam)
- Larabanga Historic Mosque[20]
- Wechiau Hippo Sanctuary[21]
Business and Investment
[edit]It is one of the main grain and tuber producing areas in Ghana. Harnessing these particularly will help to create employment and reduce poverty. The Region has about 2.69 million hectares of land under cropping and livestock rearing.
It has unique climatic and soil characteristic making the area ideal for growing of pineapples (number one non- traditional export crop in Ghana), yams (second most important non-traditional export crop) cassava and maize.[22]
Demographics
[edit]The Savannah Region has a low population density, and along with the official language of English, most inhabitants speak a language of the Oti–Volta subfamily in the Niger–Congo language family, such as Gonja, Vagla, Dagbani, Mamprusi and Tampulma.
Economy
[edit]Educational institutions
[edit]Administrative divisions
[edit]The political administration of the region is through the local government system. Under this administration system, the region is divided into seven MMDA's (made up of 0 Metropolitan, 2 Municipal and 5 Ordinary Assemblies).[30] Each District, Municipal or Metropolitan Assembly, is administered by a Chief Executive, representing the central government but deriving authority from an Assembly headed by a presiding member elected from among the members themselves. The current list is as follows:

| # | MMDA Name | Capital | MMDA Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bole | Bole | Ordinary |
| 2 | Central Gonja | Buipe | Ordinary |
| 3 | North Gonja | Daboya | Ordinary |
| 4 | East Gonja[31] | Salaga | Municipal |
| 5 | North East Gonja | Kpalbe | Ordinary |
| 6 | Sawla-Tuna-Kalba | Sawla | Ordinary |
| 7 | West Gonja[32] | Damongo | Municipal |
Famous citizens
[edit]| # | Citizen | Settlement |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | John Dramani Mahama | Bole |
| 2 | Lepowura M.N.D Jawula | Salaga |
| 3 | Ibrahim Mahama | Bole |
References
[edit]- ^ "Northern Region". GhanaDistricts.com. Archived from the original on 11 February 2010. Retrieved 20 November 2009.
- ^ "Ghana Districts: A repository of all Local Assemblies in Ghana". GhanaDistricts.com. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
- ^ "Ghana Districts: A repository of all Local Assemblies in Ghana".
- ^ Ghana: Administrative Division
- ^ "2.2million Ghanaians dey vote Yes or No for creation of six new regions". BBC News Pidgin. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
- ^ "SAVANNAH REGION – LOCAL GOVERNMENT SERVICE". Retrieved 6 June 2022.
- ^ Zoure, Stephen (27 December 2018). "Mahama votes in referendum for proposed Savannah Region in Bole". MyNewsGH. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
- ^ "'Savannah will soon catch-up with other regions' - Akufo-Addo assures". Citi Newsroom. 20 May 2019. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ "SAVANNAH REGION – LOCAL GOVERNMENT SERVICE". Retrieved 6 June 2022.
- ^ a b "2nd Ministerial list out: Akufo-Addo creates new ministries, re-aligns old". myjoyonline.com. myjoyonline. Retrieved 22 June 2017.
- ^ "Council of State met 36 times on new Regions - Nana Otuo Siriboe II". GhanaCrusader.com - Latest News in Ghana and Beyond. 16 August 2017. Archived from the original on 12 December 2017. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
- ^ ""Creation Of New Region In Your Hands" – President Akufo-Addo To Nayiri – The Presidency, Republic of Ghana". presidency.gov.gh. Archived from the original on 11 December 2017. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
- ^ "Referendum: Massive YES votes for 6 new regions | General News 2018-12-28". www.ghanaweb.com. 28 December 2018. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
- ^ "All six proposed regions meet constitutional threshold requirements – EC". Ghana Business News. 29 December 2018.
- ^ Zurek, Kweku (28 December 2018). "CONFIRMED: Results of the 2018 Referendum on new regions". Graphic Online. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
- ^ "Referendum: 6 new regions get massive 'YES' votes". www.pulse.com.gh. 28 December 2018. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
- ^ "Savannah Region will benefit from her natural resource deposits – Akufo-Addo". 12 February 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f "St. Anne's Catholic Hospital, two others adjudged best performing hospitals in savannah region". Radio For Peace and Development. 5 April 2023. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
- ^ "Bui National Park". Ghana Wildlife Division. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
- ^ Haun, William (24 July 2018). "Ghana's Historic Mosques: Larabanga". Hauns in Africa. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
- ^ Haun, William (11 May 2018). "Visiting the Wechiau Hippo Sanctuary". Hauns in Africa. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
- ^ Otoo, E.; Asiedu, Robert; Ennin, S.; Ekpe, E. (2005). "Yam production in the derived coastal savanna zone of Ghana Past, Present and Future Prospects". Agricultural and Food Science Journal of Ghana.
- ^ "Table 4.17: Population by religious affiliation and region, 2010" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 July 2018. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
- ^ "Assistant Headmaster of Bole SHS arrested for alleged rape". Graphic Online. Retrieved 27 May 2022.
- ^ "Students of Buipe SHS sent home after fire gutted girls' dormitories". Citinewsroom - Comprehensive News in Ghana. 3 February 2020. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
- ^ "Damongo Senior High School Archives - MyJoyOnline.com". www.myjoyonline.com. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
- ^ Amoh, Emmanuel Kwame (23 July 2020). "Salaga SHS gets boys' dormitory, classroom block". 3NEWS.com. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
- ^ "Senior High Schools in Savannah Region of Ghana". schoolsInGh. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
- ^ "Daboya Community Day School | SchoolsInGh.com". schoolsInGh. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
- ^ "Northern". GhanaDistricts.com. Archived from the original on 18 January 2013. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
- ^ "MP redeems campaign pledge in donating brand new motorcycles - MyJoyOnline.com". www.myjoyonline.com. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
- ^ "Driver's 'mate' feared dead in accident at Damongo - MyJoyOnline.com". www.myjoyonline.com. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
External links
[edit]- GhanaDistricts.com – Northern Region Archived 11 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine
- "Districts of Ghana". Statoids.
- GhanaDistricts.com
Savannah Region
View on GrokipediaHistory
Pre-colonial and colonial periods
The Gonja Kingdom emerged in the mid-16th century when Ndewura Jakpa, originating from the Mande region, led conquests across the savanna territories of present-day northern Ghana, establishing dominance through military campaigns that extended from west to east.[8] Jakpa divided the kingdom into seven provinces ruled by his sons, fostering a centralized structure that controlled key savanna trade routes linking southern forest zones with northern Sahelian markets.[9] These routes facilitated exchanges of kola nuts sourced from the south for northern commodities such as livestock, textiles, leather goods, and natron, while slaves and gold dust also flowed northward, bolstering Gonja's economic and political power amid frequent warfare with neighboring groups like the Dagomba.[10] British colonial expansion into the region began in the late 19th century following conflicts with the Asante Empire, culminating in the formal declaration of the Northern Territories as a protectorate in 1902, administered separately from the Gold Coast Colony to minimize costs and resistance.[11] Under indirect rule, British authorities governed through existing traditional chiefs and divisional structures inherited from the Gonja Kingdom, imposing minimal direct administration while extracting labor and resources via taxation and corvée systems, which preserved local hierarchies but subordinated them to colonial oversight.[12] This approach established administrative divisions, such as chiefdoms and districts, that influenced later territorial boundaries in the area. In the early 20th century, colonial policies spurred significant labor migrations from the Northern Territories southward to Gold Coast mines and cocoa farms, with organized recruitment beginning around 1906 to supply workers for expanding economic sectors.[13] These movements involved ethnic groups including Gonja and related savanna peoples, fostering interactions with southern Akan communities that introduced new cultural exchanges, intermarriages, and seasonal settlement patterns, thereby diversifying local demographics through return migrations and remittances that altered traditional agrarian societies.[14]Post-independence developments
Upon Ghana's attainment of independence on March 6, 1957, the territories that would later form the Savannah Region were incorporated into the Northern Region as part of the unified state under Prime Minister Kwame Nkrumah's Convention People's Party (CPP) administration.[15] Nkrumah's centralist policies emphasized rapid industrialization and import-substitution strategies, primarily leveraging southern cocoa revenues to fund national projects, which critics contend exacerbated infrastructural disparities by sidelining northern savanna areas that served largely as a labor reserve for southern mines and farms.[16] This era saw minimal investment in northern roads, railways, or irrigation, perpetuating reliance on subsistence agriculture amid critiques of deliberate neglect to maintain political control through uneven development.[17] Decentralization initiatives gained traction in the 1980s under Jerry Rawlings' Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC), with the 1988 Local Government Law and subsequent acts devolving some administrative powers to district assemblies, ostensibly to address regional imbalances including in the north.[18] However, implementation faltered due to inadequate fiscal transfers and capacity constraints, leaving northern districts with persistent underfunding; for instance, by the early 1990s, northern regions received disproportionately low shares of national development budgets relative to population needs.[19] Under John Kufuor's New Patriotic Party government (2001–2009), further decentralization reforms, including the creation of additional districts, aimed to enhance local governance, yet agricultural productivity in the savanna zones stagnated, with yam and millet yields lagging national averages due to limited mechanization and extension services, while educational attainment remained low—secondary enrollment rates in northern areas hovered below 20% compared to over 40% nationally by 2000.[20] [21] By the 2000s, agitations for subdividing the Northern Region intensified, driven by claims of systemic marginalization; local leaders and civil groups petitioned governments citing per capita resource allocation gaps, such as northern infrastructure spending at under 10% of southern levels despite comprising a third of the land area.[22] These demands, rooted in perceived inequities in education funding—where northern schools often lacked basic facilities—and agricultural support, prompted temporary interventions like a $166 million package in 2012 under President John Mahama to bolster northern development and avert escalation, though underlying disparities in poverty rates (over 70% in northern savanna districts versus national 25%) persisted into the late 2010s. [23]Creation and early regional administration
The demand for a separate Savannah Region originated from long-standing petitions by traditional authorities, particularly the Gonja Traditional Council under Yagbonwura Tumtumba Boresa Jakpa I, seeking administrative autonomy for the western areas of the Northern Region to address developmental disparities.[24] These efforts aligned with the New Patriotic Party's 2016 election manifesto commitment to evaluate and implement new regions based on verified petitions, leading to the establishment of a Commission of Inquiry in 2017 to assess viability.[25] A referendum on the creation of the Savannah Region, among five proposed new regions, was conducted on December 27, 2018, across the relevant districts. Voters overwhelmingly endorsed the proposal, with 99.7% approving in the Savannah areas, reflecting strong local support despite logistical challenges in voter mobilization.[26][27] The region was formally established via Constitutional Instrument No. 115, effective February 2019, primarily carving out seven districts from the Northern Region, including West Gonja, Central Gonja, East Gonja, North Gonja, Bole, Sawla/Tuna/Kalba, and North East Gonja.[3][28] On February 12, 2019, President Nana Akufo-Addo announced Damongo, in the former West Gonja District, as the regional capital, marking the initial step toward operationalizing governance structures such as the Regional Coordinating Council.[29] Early administration prioritized boundary rationalization and asset transfers from the Northern Region, but encountered hurdles including inadequate infrastructure like water and electricity shortages, limited educational facilities, and delays in deploying sufficient administrative personnel, which hampered service delivery from inception.[30][31] These issues underscored the transitional complexities of decentralizing resources in a newly formed entity with low baseline development.[32]Geography
Location, boundaries, and size
The Savannah Region occupies the north-central portion of Ghana and ranks as the country's largest administrative region by land area, encompassing 35,862 km².[33] This extent represents approximately 15% of Ghana's total land area of 238,533 km².[34] [35] It shares boundaries with the Upper West Region to the north, the Northern Region to the east, the Bono and Bono East Regions to the south, and Côte d'Ivoire to the west along an international border.[24] [36] The region's position, spanning roughly 8° to 10° N latitude and 1° to 3° W longitude, supports cross-border trade and seasonal migration patterns with Côte d'Ivoire, leveraging shared savanna ecosystems and historical migration corridors.[37]Topography, hydrology, and natural resources
The Savannah Region features predominantly flat to gently undulating savanna plains, with elevations generally ranging from 100 to 300 meters above sea level, as evidenced by topographic data from key settlements such as Buipe at approximately 100 meters and Damongo at around 200 meters.[38] These low-lying landforms are part of Ghana's northern interior plateau, characterized by open grasslands interspersed with scattered woodland and occasional residual hills or inselbergs that influence local drainage patterns.[39] The region's hydrology is dominated by the Volta River Basin, where tributaries of the Black Volta and White Volta rivers, including the Mole River, form the primary drainage network.[40] These watercourses are largely ephemeral or seasonal, exhibiting high variability in flow due to dependence on unimodal rainfall, with many reducing to dry channels during the extended dry season from November to March.[41] Groundwater from fractured basement aquifers and weathered regolith zones serves as a vital resource for boreholes and wells, supporting limited irrigation potential amid surface water scarcity, though overexploitation poses risks to aquifer sustainability.[42] Natural resources include untapped mineral potentials such as limestone, iron ore, and possibly gold within the Northern Savannah Ecological Zone, which encompasses the region and offers opportunities for extraction linked to infrastructure development.[43] The savanna landscape also harbors biodiversity hotspots, including wildlife populations in areas like Mole National Park, where species such as elephants contribute to ecological value and ecotourism prospects, though habitat pressures from land use limit broader resource yields.[44] Arable savanna soils, while erosion-prone due to the flat terrain and variable hydrology, hold potential for sustainable agriculture if supported by targeted resource management.[45]Climate, vegetation, and environmental challenges
The Savannah Region of Ghana features a tropical savanna climate, marked by a single wet season typically spanning May to October, during which rainfall averages 900–1200 mm annually, concentrated in intense bursts that support seasonal agriculture. The dry season, from November to April, brings harmattan winds from the Sahara, reducing humidity and increasing dust levels, while mean temperatures range from 28°C to 35°C year-round, with peaks exceeding 40°C in the late dry period.[46][47][48] Vegetation is dominated by Guinea savanna woodland, characterized by tall grasses such as Andropogon and Hyparrhenia species, alongside scattered drought-resistant trees including shea (Vitellaria paradoxa), baobab (Adansonia digitata), and acacias. This biome supports a grassy understory maintained by periodic fires and grazing, with tree density decreasing northward into the drier Sudan savanna zone, where woody cover thins and herbaceous layers predominate.[49][50] Key environmental challenges include desertification driven by overgrazing, fuelwood extraction, and agricultural expansion, which have reduced vegetative cover and soil fertility across the region, exacerbating land degradation in vulnerable northern areas. Recurrent flooding along the White Volta River, intensified by upstream dam releases from Burkina Faso—such as the 2020 spills that inundated farmlands—poses risks to infrastructure and crops during peak wet months from August to October. Climate change projections forecast diminished rainfall reliability and elevated temperatures, potentially cutting crop yields by 10–30% for staples like maize and sorghum without adaptive measures, heightening food insecurity in rain-fed systems.[51][52][53][54][55]Demographics
Population size and growth
The Savannah Region recorded a population of 653,266 in the 2021 Ghana Population and Housing Census conducted by the Ghana Statistical Service, marking it as one of the less populous regions in the country with a density of approximately 18.8 persons per square kilometer across its 34,790 square kilometers.[56] This figure reflects a predominantly rural distribution, with urbanization concentrated in administrative centers such as Damongo, the regional capital, and Salaga, where small-town markets draw limited inflows but overall urban shares remain below 20 percent of the total population. Prior to the region's creation in 2018 from portions of the former Northern Region, the corresponding territorial area had an estimated population of 469,510 according to 2010 census delineations adjusted for the new boundaries.[56] Between 2010 and 2021, the population grew at an average annual rate of 3.1 percent, outpacing the national average of 2.1 percent due to sustained high fertility rates—estimated at around 5.5 children per woman in northern Ghana—and net positive natural increase.[56] Ghana Statistical Service projections indicate continued expansion, reaching approximately 674,600 by 2025 and potentially doubling regional populations in northern areas like Savannah by 2050 under medium-variant assumptions.[57][58] Demographic pressures include a pronounced youth bulge, with over 50 percent of the population under age 20, contributing to high dependency ratios exceeding 80 dependents per 100 working-age individuals, as derived from age-sex distributions in the 2021 census. Net migration patterns feature inflows of refugees from Sahel conflicts in neighboring Burkina Faso, adding several thousand since 2019, alongside outflows of labor migrants seeking employment in southern Ghana's urban and agricultural sectors. These dynamics sustain growth but strain local resources in rural districts, where infrastructure lags behind enumeration trends.Ethnic groups and languages
The Savannah Region of Ghana is characterized by ethnic diversity, with the Gonja people as the dominant group, historically associated with the pre-colonial Gonja Kingdom that shaped regional power structures. According to 2021 census data, the Guan ethnic category—which predominantly encompasses the Gonja in this context—accounts for approximately 245,446 individuals, representing the largest share among major groupings in the region's total population of 581,368.[56] Other significant minorities include the Vagla, Tampulma (also known as Tamprama), Brifo, and Mamprusi, alongside smaller communities such as the Hanga, Dagomba, and Dagaaba, reflecting migrations from neighboring areas like Dagbon.[59] The region hosts over 19 ethnic groups in total, with self-identification in censuses emphasizing indigenous ties to land and chieftaincy systems rather than rigid numerical dominance beyond the Gonja core.[3] Linguistically, Gonja serves as the primary indigenous language, spoken widely as a lingua franca among the majority population, while Dagbani prevails in areas influenced by Dagomba migrations and related groups.[60] Other languages include Vagla, Tampulma, and Moore, with English functioning as the official language for administration and education, though proficiency remains low due to limited access to formal schooling in rural districts.[24] Dialectal variations within Gonja reflect local subgroups, but no standardized orthography dominates, contributing to oral traditions over written records. Inter-ethnic relations have been molded by the hierarchical legacy of the Gonja Kingdom, fostering alliances through trade and marriage but also latent competitions over farmland and water resources in this savanna belt. While coexistence has generally been stable, periodic flare-ups occur, as evidenced by 2025 clashes between Gonja and Brifo communities in Sawla-Tuna-Kalba District, displacing thousands amid disputes over land boundaries—a pattern rooted in colonial-era boundary ambiguities rather than inherent animosities.[61] Similar tensions with Lobi groups in Gbenyiri village that year resulted in over 30 fatalities, underscoring how resource scarcity exacerbates historical claims without derailing broader regional integration.[62] These incidents, tracked by national peace bodies, highlight the need for chieftaincy mediation over external impositions.[59]Religion and cultural practices
Islam predominates in the Savannah Region, with Muslims comprising 64.1% of the population, or 418,352 individuals out of approximately 653,000 residents as per the 2021 Ghana Population and Housing Census.[63][56] This prevalence is particularly strong among ethnic groups like the Gonja, who form the region's core population and have historically integrated Islamic practices since the 15th century through trade routes from the Sahel.[6] Traditional African religions persist, especially in rural communities, emphasizing ancestor veneration, earth shrine worship, and rituals to maintain harmony with spiritual forces tied to land and fertility.[6] These beliefs often blend syncretically with Islam, as seen in practices where mosque attendance coexists with offerings to ancestral spirits or participation in earth cults for agricultural prosperity. Christianity, representing 10-20% of adherents based on regional trends diverging from national figures of 71% Christian overall, has grown through missionary activities and urban migration, though it remains a minority faith concentrated in district capitals.[64] Cultural practices reflect this religious mosaic, with festivals reinforcing communal bonds and spiritual obligations. Among the Gonja, the Jintigi Fire Festival, observed annually around April, involves lighting torches and processions to honor traditions and invoke blessings, blending pre-Islamic elements with Islamic tolerance.[65] Similar events among groups like the Vagla, such as the Kaafo Festival at Dagbigu, feature sacrifices to earth deities for bountiful harvests, underscoring animist roots.[66] Religious tolerance is generally high across the region, supported by Ghana's pluralistic framework, enabling interfaith coexistence in mixed communities.[67] However, frictions occasionally arise in areas with active proselytism, particularly over conversions between Islam and Christianity, prompting calls for dialogue in educational settings to mitigate tensions.[68]Government and Administration
Regional capital and governance structure
Damongo serves as the regional capital of the Savannah Region, having been designated upon the region's establishment in December 2018 through Legislative Instrument 2373 and officially declared as such on 12 February 2019.[36][24] The capital hosts key administrative offices, including those of the Savannah Regional Coordinating Council (SRCC), which oversees regional development coordination and implementation of national policies at the local level.[69] The governance framework is anchored in the Local Governance Act, 2016 (Act 936), which establishes a decentralized system with the Regional Coordinating Council as the apex body, chaired by the Regional Minister appointed by the President and supported by a Deputy Regional Minister.[70] The SRCC monitors and evaluates the performance of metropolitan, municipal, and district assemblies (MMDAs) within the region, facilitates inter-district collaboration, and advises on resource mobilization for development projects.[71] Traditional councils maintain distinct roles in customary law, land tenure, and chieftaincy matters, operating in parallel to formal decentralized units such as area councils and unit committees, which handle grassroots administration under district assemblies.[72] Budgeting and resource allocation involve close coordination between the SRCC and national ministries, with regional plans aligned to the national medium-term framework; however, regional and district authorities exhibit substantial fiscal dependence on central government transfers, which often form the bulk of operational funding and constrain independent revenue generation.[73][74] This structure underscores ongoing challenges in achieving full devolution of financial powers despite legislative provisions for local revenue sources like property rates and licenses.[75]Administrative divisions and local authorities
The Savannah Region is divided into seven metropolitan, municipal, and district assemblies (MMDAs), which serve as the primary local government units responsible for planning, budgeting, and implementing development programs within their jurisdictions.[76] These assemblies were established following the region's creation in 2019 through the subdivision of former districts from the Northern Region to enhance administrative efficiency and equity in resource allocation.[77]| District/Municipal Assembly | Capital | Type |
|---|---|---|
| Bole District | Bole | District |
| Central Gonja District | Buipe | District |
| East Gonja Municipal Assembly | Salaga | Municipal |
| North East Gonja District | Kpalbe | District |
| North Gonja District | Daboya | District |
| Sawla-Tuna-Kalba District | Sawla | District |
| West Gonja Municipal Assembly | Damango | Municipal |
Political representation and recent elections
The Savannah Region is represented in Ghana's unicameral Parliament by seven Members of Parliament (MPs), each elected from one of the region's seven single-member constituencies: Bole/Bamboi, Daboya/Mankarigu, Damongo, Salaga North, Salaga South, Sawla/Tuna/Kalba, and Yapei/Kusawgu.[86] These constituencies were delineated by Ghana's Electoral Commission following the region's creation in 2019, with boundary adjustments increasing the number from an initial five to seven ahead of the 2024 elections.[87] In the parliamentary elections of December 7, 2020—the first since the region's establishment—the National Democratic Congress (NDC) won four seats (Bole/Bamboi, Salaga South, Sawla/Tuna/Kalba, and Yapei/Kusawgu), while the New Patriotic Party (NPP) secured two (Damongo and Daboya/Mankarigu).[88][89] Voter turnout stood at approximately 70% region-wide, aligning with national averages, though logistical challenges in rural areas like poor roads affected participation in remote polling stations.[90] Presidential results mirrored this, with NDC candidate John Dramani Mahama receiving 138,001 votes (60.31%) against NPP's Nana Akufo-Addo with 86,612 (37.85%).[91] The December 7, 2024, elections saw the NDC consolidate its hold, capturing six seats—including Bole/Bamboi (Yusif Sulemana with 26,599 votes, 78.17%), Daboya/Mankarigu (Shaibu Mahama), Salaga South, and the others—leaving the NPP with only Damongo (Samuel Abdulai Jinapor).[86][92] Mahama's presidential margin widened to 147,617 votes (67.76%) versus NPP's Mahamudu Bawumia with 66,577 (30.56%).[93] This shift reflects intensified NDC mobilization amid economic hardships, with campaigns emphasizing infrastructure pledges such as road upgrades and irrigation projects tailored to the region's agrarian needs.[94] Voting patterns in the Savannah Region exemplify northern Ghana's dynamics, where NDC enjoys baseline support from ethnic groups like the Gonja and Mamprusi due to historical ties and perceived attentiveness to regional grievances, yet NPP retains pockets of influence—particularly in Damongo—through targeted patronage like constituency-level projects under Jinapor's ministerial role.[95] Critics, including civil society observers, argue that electoral competition often prioritizes short-term clientelism, such as cash distributions and localized favors, over long-term policy reforms, contributing to persistent underdevelopment despite repeated infrastructure promises.[96] Regional stakeholders, including MPs and traditional leaders, have advocated for enhanced fiscal devolution to address perceptions of southern-dominated national resource allocation, which data shows allocates disproportionately fewer development funds per capita to northern areas like Savannah compared to coastal regions.[97] This sentiment fueled 2024 campaign discourse, with NDC pledges for equitable budgeting cited as a factor in their sweep, though implementation remains unverified post-election.[93]Economy
Agricultural and primary sectors
The agricultural sector dominates the economy of the Savannah Region, where smallholder farming and pastoralism sustain the majority of households through rain-fed cultivation of staple cereals and legumes on nutrient-deficient soils. Primary crops include maize, sorghum, millet, yams, cowpeas, and groundnuts, often intercropped to maximize limited land resources in this Guinea savanna zone.[98][99] Yields remain low, averaging below potential due to erratic rainfall patterns, soil compaction, and minimal use of fertilizers or improved seeds, with maize production constrained by a yield gap linked to these factors.[100][101] Cash crops such as cotton and shea nuts provide supplementary income and export opportunities, though cotton output has declined amid climate variability, with average farm yields dropping by approximately 510 kg/ha between the 2011/2012 and 2015/2016 seasons across observed plots.[102] Shea trees, abundant in the region's agroforestry systems, yield nuts processed into butter, contributing to Ghana's national production of around 33,760 metric tons annually from 2018 to 2022, predominantly from northern savanna areas including Savannah Region; however, traditional extraction methods result in substantial post-harvest losses and variable output cycles influenced by precipitation.[103][104] Livestock rearing, centered on cattle, sheep, and goats, integrates with crop systems via pastoral transhumance, supporting livelihoods for groups like Fulani herders who migrate seasonally within and from the region; this sector faces challenges from farmer-herder disputes over grazing lands encroaching on fields.[105][106] Overall, these primary activities underpin food security but are hampered by the absence of irrigation infrastructure, rendering production vulnerable to dry spells in this predominantly agrarian zone where over 70% of rural labor engages in farming.[107][98]Emerging industries and investment
In October 2025, President John Dramani Mahama announced plans to establish the Catholic Science and Technology University in Damongo, the regional capital, as a major educational investment to foster innovation and skilled workforce development in science and technology sectors.[108] This project, backed by a $30 million grant from China, aims to position Damongo as an emerging center for higher education and research, potentially attracting related industries such as information technology and applied sciences.[109] Concurrently, Mahama pledged infrastructure enhancements, including the construction of a regional hospital, water supply systems, and rehabilitation of key roads like the Damongo-Salaga-Buipe highway, to improve logistics and enable industrial growth.[110][111] The Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) has identified agro-processing as a priority for value addition in northern regions like Savannah, with roadmaps emphasizing incentives for manufacturing facilities to process local resources into higher-value products.[112] However, foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows to the region remain constrained, skewed toward southern Ghana due to better infrastructure and market access, limiting large-scale industrial entry.[113] Mining represents an underdeveloped prospect, with small-scale gold extraction ongoing in parts of the region amid Ghana's broader northern mineral belts, though large-scale bauxite or gold operations have not yet materialized locally due to exploratory and regulatory hurdles.[114] Salaga continues to function as a modest trade hub for local commerce, leveraging its historical market infrastructure for small-scale exchanges in goods, though expansion is hampered by poor connectivity.[115] These efforts underscore government-led initiatives to diversify beyond primary sectors, but sustained private investment awaits resolved barriers like inadequate roads and power supply.[116]Economic challenges and poverty indicators
The Savannah Region ranks among Ghana's most impoverished areas, with a multidimensional poverty incidence of 49.5% recorded in 2024, reflecting deprivations in health, education, living standards, and employment far exceeding the national average of 24.8%.[117] This metric, derived from the Ghana Statistical Service's analysis, underscores the region's vulnerability, where nearly half the population experiences overlapping hardships, including inadequate access to clean water, sanitation, and nutrition. Youth unemployment exacerbates these conditions, hovering above 38% in the region as of 2025 estimates, driven by limited formal job opportunities and skills mismatches in a predominantly agrarian economy.[118][119] National labor surveys indicate that rates for ages 15-24 in northern zones like Savannah exceed the country's 32% average, with underemployment further inflating effective joblessness to over 50% for young adults. Structural factors compound poverty persistence, including recurrent climate shocks such as variable rainfall and prolonged dry spells that disrupt rain-fed farming, the primary livelihood for over 80% of residents.[120] Inadequate road networks—many unpaved and impassable during rainy seasons—impede market access for produce, raising post-harvest losses to 20-30% and constraining commercialization.[121] Unsustainable resource use, including illicit charcoal production and agricultural expansion into marginal lands, accelerates soil degradation and deforestation rates exceeding 1% annually in savanna zones, undermining long-term productivity.[122] Government initiatives like the Planting for Food and Jobs (PFJ) program, launched in 2017 to boost yields through subsidized inputs, have delivered mixed outcomes in northern Ghana. Empirical assessments show yield gains of up to 40% for maize and rice in participating areas, yet income elevations remain insignificant due to input cost volatility and market barriers, with farm expenditures often offsetting benefits.[123][124] In Savannah specifically, adoption challenges—such as delayed fertilizer distribution and low extension services—have limited scalability, yielding only marginal poverty reductions despite national investments exceeding GHS 2 billion annually.| Indicator | Value (Recent Estimate) | Notes/Source |
|---|---|---|
| Multidimensional Poverty Incidence | 49.5% | 2024 GSS survey; highest regionally. |
| Youth Unemployment (15-24 years) | >38% | 2025 regional data; exceeds national 32%.[118] |
| Post-Harvest Losses | 20-30% | Due to infrastructure deficits in savanna agriculture.[121] |
| Annual Deforestation Rate | >1% | Driven by expansion and extraction in zone.[122] |
