Onion vendors who were relocated from Agbogbloshie to Adjen Kotoku are pleading with the government to stop encroaching on their property.
They believe that by doing so, the nation would avoid paying millions of cedis to relocate the onion merchants in the near future.
Rashid, the market's young leader, believes that the sooner the government intervenes, the better for the trade center's future.
According to him, if one imagines the market five years or more from now, the necessary growth may not be possible owing to encroached territory, resulting in another move.
Following repeated failed attempts by past Accra mayors and administrations to decongest the Agbogbloshie market by relocating onion merchants to other sites, current Greater Accra Minister Henry Quartey scored up achievement.
Mr Quartey was forced to recede and engage stakeholders after significant opposition to the transfer.
Mr Quartey visited with Members of Parliament, traders' leadership, the Chief Imam, other chiefs, and opinion leaders in the days leading up to the eviction deadline.
Finally, the tens of thousands of squatters at Agbogbloshie were relocated to Adjen Kotoku in the Ga West municipality and Gomoa Domenase in the Central Region.
Agbogbloshie, a former marsh that subsequently became home to one of the world's largest electronic garbage dumps, has been recovered and now seems to be undeveloped terrain.
This enormous plot of land in the center of Ghana's capital city has now been set aside for a variety of government initiatives, including the much-touted Agenda 111 health project.
Adom News went on a trip to see how the refugees are doing at Adjen Kotoku and Domenase roughly a year after the famous Agbogbloshie evacuation.
Adom News had a closer look at the over 5,000 onion merchants, their new surroundings, and business conditions. After relocating from Agbogbloshie, one of the heads of the onion vendors' group informed the television crew that business is picking up.
The market appears to be unfinished since many vendors lack shelters, which they labeled as a failure on the part of the relocation's architect, the Greater Accra Regional Minister.
The situation is not encouraging in terms of hygiene, since mobile toilets and other garbage bins are overflowing and uncollected by the assembly.
They also criticized the negative impact on their vehicles of the poor road going to the market.