Proposed Police Station & Post Project (PSPP)[/caption] The Church of Pentecost is to initiate a security-based development project under its five-year vision to build more police stations and posts across the country. “This will be our contribution to Government’s efforts to provide Police Posts in communities where they are needed,” the Chairman of the Church of Pentecost, Apostle Eric Nyamekye has disclosed. Dubbed “Police Station and Post project (PSPP)” the Chairman said the stations would be cited in some selected “deprived and insecure areas”. Apostle Nyamekye announced this when he launched the Church’s environmental care campaign under the slogan “My Environment, My Responsibility” with support from waste management company Zoomlion Ghana Limited on Thursday November 22 at the PIWC-Kokomlele in Accra . The police posts and the environmental care campaign are contained in the Vision 2023 in which The Church of Pentecost is seeking to develop a strategic partnership with the state aimed at helping to develop Ghana. [caption id="attachment_105666" align="aligncenter" width="631"] Proposed Police Station & Post Project (PSPP)[/caption] “As part of our efforts to promote the values and principles of the Kingdom of God in our state and non-state institutions, the church shall seek to train more chaplains and deploy them to various institutions such as the Military, Police, Prisons, Hospice/Hospitals, sports, orphanages, palaces as well as some corporate institutions.” Environmental Care The Chairman of the Church noted that the campaign on environment fits perfectly into the vision of Ghana’s President to make Ghana clean and Accra the cleanest city in the sub-region by 2020. Environmental Care Campaign has been planned in a way which could be tackled in four main categories, Aps. Nyamekye mentioned: education, Clean-up exercises, community-based initiatives and other activities. Other Interventions under Church-State Strategic Partnership
- The church will partner the government to provide potable drinking water in some selected deprived communities.