Ms Emefa Adeti, Ghana's Most Beautiful 2012, on Saturday commissioned an electricity project in Mafi-Aformanorkope, in the Volta Region as part of her program aimed at helping to foster development of the region.
The project which was supported by Mr Joe Gidisu, Member of Parliament for Central Tongu, also connects the community, with a total population of about 300 people to the National grid.
Ms Adeti said that the community was one of the communities in the region that was yet to develop in most ways saying education of the girl child must not be taken for granted since most of the girls in the community were drop-outs.
She said her team was well informed about the unsafe nature of their source of drinking water as well as their places of convenience adding that more would be done to help alleviate the situation.
Ms Adeti appealed to the parents not to squander all their hard earned monies on material things but invest the money into the education of their children so that the lot of the entire society could be improved.
She said in the coming February she would launch her Foundation dubbed " Emefa Help Ghana Foundation", which would aim at providing hope to the hopeless through the provision of life saving amenities which when absent could take away the happiness in a child.
Ms Adeti said amongst others, her Foundation would be concerned with issues like Chlamydia, a disease affecting women in some communities, supporting hospitals with general goods, organizing donations to help the needy and seeking funds to help in rehabilitating school facilities across the nation.
"Any community in any region found within the walls of Ghana, that seeks our help with a particular humanitarian need within our ambit, would receive some level of support from the Foundation, as we know such efforts would help ameliorate some societal concerns", she said.
Mr Thomas Anomah, a former Assembly Member for Sasekpe, and an Opinion Leader in the community, said the project which had provided the community with about 17 electronic polls started in October last year.
He said as every human being is expected to grow, so does every community expect growth, which would be measured by its development projects, such as electricity, good source of drinking water as well as a KVIP.
Mr Anomah said the community always faces perennial water problems when their only source of stream water dries up during the dry season, saying this always makes it difficult for natives who walk several kilometers in search for water from other sources that are often very unacceptable for human consumption.
He appealed to government to support the community by providing them with KVIP'S, good water systems as well as gravel roads and help make the community motorable.