The Mayor urged traders to abide by the directive and warned that anyone caught going against metropolitan rules will have their vehicles with the goods impounded.
“That is the new rule, and it will continue,”  he said, adding “we have not said you should not offload your goods, we are saying you should do it between 6PM and 6AM.”
AMA decongestion
Some AMA officials were seen clearing the streets of Accra
Mr Sowah who has vowed to improve the sanitary conditions in the city where garbage heaps are sometimes found by streets in broad daylight.
Already, the AMA has begun an exercise to rid hawkers and traders off pavements and footbridges in the metropolis as part of efforts to decongest the city.
The Assembly says the activities of the traders and hawkers impede the flow of vehicular and human traffic and contribute to the heaps of garbage along major streets of the metropolis.
AMA decongestion
Goods of traders who were selling on the pavements were seized by the police
Being spearheaded by the Metropolitan Security Committee, a team comprising of the police and military, the AMA taskforce will carry out the decongestion exercise at various business districts.
The exercise is expected to cover the Central Business District, Kaneshie Market Area, N1 highway, Kwame Nkrumah Interchange and along the Odorkor-Kwashieman road.
Mr Sowah vowed, the decongestion exercise will be sustained.