Wednesday, December 24, 2008

AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENTS SUPPORTS CHRI (Centre Spread)

19/12/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
THE Australian government has provided GH¢56,000 to the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative (CHRI) to support a project to protect the rights of arrested persons in Ghana.
The money will be used to produce information booklets on the rights of arrested persons and conduct information and advocacy sessions in five regions of the country.
The project will be implemented in consultation with the Ghana Police Service, the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) and the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ).
Presenting the money at a short ceremony in Accra, the Australian High Commissioner to Ghana, Mr William Williams, said in 1948 Australia was one of the 47 original signatories to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which gave a global expression to the basic rights and freedoms to which all human beings were entitled.
He said for the past 60 years, Australia had been a leading proponent of the consistent and comprehensive implementation of the declaration.
“In this spirit, we are pleased to be able to support activities to promote human rights in Ghana,” he said, adding that Australia had previously funded a number of projects in the human rights sector which included supporting the rehabilitation of ex-trokosis in the Volta Region.
Mr Williams said the project would be funded under the Australian Human Rights Small Grants Scheme and said 1.5 million Australian dollars would be provided for projects in 19 African countries, Asia-Pacific and the Middle East to promote good governance, gender equality, disability rights and children’s rights and combat human trafficking.
For her part, Nana Oye Lithur, who is in charge of the CHRI Africa Office, said her office started implementing a project on police accountability in 2005, with the ultimate objective to initiate advocacy for reforms in the Ghana Police Service in order to bring the service in line with modern principles of democratic and human rights conscious policing.
She said research previously conducted by the CDD revealed that one of the major issues militating against effective accountability in the Police Service was the fact that many people in Ghana did not know their rights and the avenues for redress when their rights were breached.
Nana Lithur said that lack of awareness culminated in many people’s rights being abused during arrests, saying that called for the need to raise awareness among the citizenry of the general scope of rights of arrested persons.
She expressed her appreciation to the Australian government for providing the funding, which she said would go a long way to create awareness in society.

POLICE READY FOR RUN OFF (Centre Spread)

19/12/2008
Story: Mary Mensah & Francis Kyei
The Police Administration says it has put in place all it takes to achieve a peaceful presidential run-off on December 28, 2008 and a smooth transfer of power on January 7, 2009.
It said it would continue to ensure that Ghana went through an incident-free transition as far as internal security and the services of the police were concerned.
The Director-General of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service, Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCOP) Frank Adu-Poku, gave the assurances yesterday at the passing out parade of the fourth batch of 116 recruits who have successfully completed their basic training at the National Police Training School in Accra.
He attributed the success of the elections on December 7, 2008 to the co-operation and co-ordination of the Police Service and its sister security agencies and noted that the professional display by the police and allied security agencies was duly acknowledged and lauded not only in Ghana but also internationally and hoped that the same mechanism of professionalism would be adopted to ensure peace during the run-off and the period of transition.
DCOP Adu-Poku cautioned the recruits against the indiscriminate and unjustifiable use of firearms, brutalisation of innocent people and suspects, bribery and corruption, indiscipline, among others.
The director-general urged the recruits to bear in mind that they were under an 18-month probation and that any breach of discipline on the part of any of them would attract appropriate disciplinary action that could end his or her career prematurely, adding, “Your confirmation after the probation period will depend on your loyalty, good conduct and commitment to duty.”
He said the three core pillars of policing were the exhibition of professionalism, discipline and correct usage of discretion, noting that as members of the profession they were expected to follow the regulations in the service instructions and be conversant with the provisions of the Police Service Act and other statutes governing the service.
DCOP Adu-Poku stated that enforcing the law in society today was not an easy task, adding, however, that as professionals who were well trained, their knowledge and skills in handling issues of human rights and modern law enforcement techniques must reflect in their performance as police officers.
The training of the 116 recruits, who are all males, took six months, during which they were schooled in both police and liberal subjects, which included Practical Police Duties, Criminal Law, Criminal Investigations, Law of Evidence, Acts and Decrees, Fundamental Human Rights and Social Psychology.
The Overall Best Recruit award went to General Recruit Joshua Kwofie.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

PRIVATE SECURITY EMPLOYEES SIGN BARGAINING AGREEMENT (Page 30)

11/12/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
A collective agreement to improve upon the salaries and working conditions of private security employees has been signed by the Association of Private Security Organisations Ghana (APSOG) and the Union of Private Security Employees (UPSEG).
Under the agreement the employees will earn specific wages, benefits, and after working for six years or more they will be paid end of service benefits and other remunerations.
The Chairman of APSOG, Nana Adu Agyemang IV, signed for the employers while Nana Kofi Adu II, Chairman of UPSEG, signed for the employees.
In an address. Nana Agyemang IV said initially the APSOG refused to have its employees unionised because they felt that they operated under the police act, since the police were not unionised, but after careful study of laws governing employment they decided to change their stance.
He said currently there were many security companies operating in the country, and that it was very important that they re-organised and restructured their operations in order to meet the expectations of their clients and employees.
He urged the employees to abide by the rules and regulations of their companies and work very hard in order to merit increased salaries.
The Chairman of UPSEG said initially workers received as low as Gh¢40 as their salaries but with the new agreement employees will earn GH¢80 or more.
He said currently there were 115 private security companies which had been licensed to operate by the Interior Ministry but there were over 300 companies operating without valid licence throughout the country.
He said the agreement covered only 60 companies which were members of the union, and added that there are over 8,000 active members.
According to him members of Private Security companies were being educated and trained to be on standby as they would be called to support the security agencies if the need arose during the elections.
For his part, the Minister of State at the Ministry of the Interior, Nana Obiri Boahen, said the ceremony would go down in the history of the country, and urged both parties to be faithful, loyal and law abiding in their operations.
He said some people were not comfortable with the operations of the private security companies, so the ministry had set up a three member committee to look into their operations.
He advised them to work hand in hand with the police by reporting the activities of criminals and other miscreants in society to them.
Mr Mohammed Affum, the Public Affairs Officer of the National Labour Commission (NLC), commended the two groups for concluding the agreement, which is a legally binding contract that embodies the terms and conditions of employment of the workers.
He said the document which also spelt out the respective rights and duties of the workers and management was a bold step taken to prevent and manage conflict in the labour market.
The Public Affairs Officer said the process of workers negotiating their terms and conditions of service with their employers represented an important element of industrial relations which meant giving voice to workers.
He expressed the hope that in the implementation and application of the provisions of the agreement both parties would seek guidance from the same understanding that characterised the negotiations.
Mr Affum gave the assurance that the NLC was ever ready to assist both parties in ensuring harmony for increased productivity, profit and growth.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

POLLS, BIG TEST FOR US ALL (Frong Page 1B)

04/12/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
The Presidential Candidate of the Democratic Peoples Party (DPP), Mr Ward Brew has called on all Ghanaians to be very careful about their temperament and reactions during the elections.
He said the Sunday’s election is a very historic event in the life of this great nation and provocation’s can come from all angles despite preparations made to ensure peace.
Mr Ward Brew said everybody is vulnerable but it behoves all to be on guard to avoid any misunderstanding.
He said politics is like a game of sport which must always produce a winner and a loser and if one becomes victorious that does not mean that his opponent is not important or not needed.
‘We need both winners and losers to make the cycle complete and in a democracy the most difficult challenge is how to co-exist with the person you have defeated in an election”, he said.
On his chances, Mr Ward Brew said he has already won the elections because if you go underground you will see that people are clamouring for a party like the DPP without any baggage.
He said people want a fresh start, a new development and a party that will reconcile the whole nation not to divide it.
“When elected as president of this great nation I will put in place a national government which will reconcile the whole nation, all political groups and heal all wounds”, he said.
According to him the CPP government left the country divided and the NDC also followed up by dividing the country and there has been criticisms about sale of government institutions between them and the NPP.
He said the criticisms that characterised the national award in July this year which forced some sections to boycott it shows that all is not well and we need to unite as a country because divided we fall.
He craved the indulgence of the other political parties to stop attacking each other with their adverts in the media and added that all campaign promises cannot materialised in an atmosphere of rancour.
He said society is made up of the living, the dead and the deities and they all have a a role to play in who should lead the country.
Mr Ward Brew indicated that DPP is like King David in the bible, where when God sent Samuel to his fathers house to find a successor to Saul he was not brought forward because he was a non entity but it turn out that he was the chosen one and “though we appear like a non entity, the seat belongs to us because we are the chosen ones”.

SPECIAL POOLS ORDERLY, Pockets of distractions recorded (Front Page)

03/12/2008
Story: Abdul Aziz & Mary Mensah
A Special voting exercise took place across the country today for security, electoral commission and media personnel who will perform duties on the elections day.
Voting started at the designated centres at 7 am in the morning and its expected to end at 5 pm after which the boxes will be kept under police guard till Sunday before it will be counted.
In the Greater Accra Region voting went on smoothly at most of the centres visited but there were some pockets of confusion at some centres.
At the Osu police barracks voting was halted by the NDC and CPP parliamentary candidates for Korley Klotttey constituency who claimed that the electoral officers were taking down names and polling station numbers and allowing people to vote instead of going according to the list of special voters they have.
Some people also complained that instead of stamping the back of the ballot papers it was signed by the electoral officers.
They challenged the electoral officers that if they continued with the exercise they will reject the voting from that centre and this generated into a heated argument and the police quickly sent a number of patrolmen to the area to avert any clash.
But according to the electoral officer at the police barracks, Mr Clement Adonae 3, 400 eligible voters who will perform special duties were supposed to vote at the centre.
He said the District electoral officer had a meeting with the representatives of the various parties and it was agreed that in order to allow more people to vote before 5 pm instead of going through the long list names should be written so that at the end of the day it will be reconciled.
He said voting started smoothly at 7am but it was stopped by the party representatives saying that because of the process people who are not special voters were being allowed to vote but the problem was resolved and voting continued only to be halted again by the parliamentary candidates.
At the Cantonments Police Station, Burma Hall, Teshie Military Academy, Teshie Police station, Kpeshie Divisional Police Command voting went on smoothly with the same process of writing down names.
At Amasaman apart from an incident where a campaign vehicle of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) pulled at the Electoral Commission near the area where the special voting exercise was taking place which attracted protests from the National Democratic Congress party accredited agent, the voting was conducted in a cordial atmosphere.
The NDC agent protested to the returning officer of the electoral commission who ordered the vehicle to leave the vicinity.
The occupant of the vehicle who was in a flowing Mohammadan gown popularly known in local parlance as ‘jalabia’ complied and jumped into the vehicle sped off.
Mr Richard Wormenor, the returning officer at the polling station said as at 10 am 229 voters had cast their votes from an expected number of 500 voters.
The Kotobabi Police station as at mid day the queues were still long as benches were made available for voters awaiting their turns to vote to sit down while others who could endure stood in the long queues.
Mr Edward Ofei Quansah, the returning officer at the Kotobabi Police Station Polling centre told the Graphic that as at 12.30 in the afternoon 260 people had voted out of a total of 500 expected to vote.

BUSH FIRES COST NATION $210 MILLION ANNUALLY (Page 28)

13/12/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
The Minister of State for the Interior, Nana Obiri Boahen, has stated that bush fires cost the nation a whopping US$210 million every year.
This, he said, was an equivalent to about three per cent of the National Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
Launching the 2008/2009 National Bush Fire Prevention Campaign, which was under the theme; ‘Prevent bush fires and save the environment”, at the Fire Academy and Training School in Accra , the minister said an estimated amount of approximately 65,000 hectares representing about three per cent of land was lost annually through human activities including mining and bush fires.
He said this year alone, a total of 88 bush fires were officially recorded and this cost the nation a lot of money.
The minister announced that this year the government has sourced for loans of $15 million and over $49 million from India and the USA respectively to procure fire tenders and they are expected to arrive in the country by next year.
Nana Boahen said since the early 1980s bush fires have become an annual ritual in the country particularly during the harmattan period, consuming large tracts of forest and farmlands bringing in its wake devastating destruction of crops and animals.
He said, the depletion of the forest cover aggravated through bush fires,was drying up water bodies and the drop in the water level of the Akosombo dam which led to the power rationing exercise in the country, was a direct result of this phenomenon.
He said the fire volunteer concept has proven to be the most effective way of dealing with fire disasters and noted that the Ghana National Fire Service has trained 2775 volunteers over the past year, bringing the number of volunteers to 22,000.
The Chief Fire officer, Mr Felix K. Ferkah, noted that to succeed in the fight against bush fires, metropolitan, municipal and district assemblies have a huge role to play.
Mr Ferkah called for the amendment of PNDC law 229 on prevention and control of bush fires which has been in existence for over two decades and said the fine of Gh¢2.00 and GH¢10 which the law prescribes cannot be enough deterrent to offenders.

TWO PUPILS DROWNED AT DANSOMAN BEACH (Page 25)

02/12/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
Two pupils of the Oral Roberts International School at Dansoman got drowned at the Dansoman beach last Friday when they went swimming after being asked by the school authorities to go home and bring their school fees.
The two boys — Joaken Larnyoh, aged 10, and Mohammed Tekpor, nine years — both class three pupils, together with three others, went to the Dansoman beach to swim and the two were swept away by the strong waves.
Narrating the unfortunate incident to the Daily Graphic in Accra, the grandfather of one of the victims, Mr Joshua Yabaku Oblokuteye, who could not hold back his tears, said on Friday while in the house the three other boys wearing only their briefs with sand all over their bodies arrived in a taxi at the house looking frightened and confused.
They informed them that they were sacked from school to go home and bring their school fees but on their way home one of them suggested that they should rather go to the beach to swim and they went.
He said according to the three boys while swimming the two deceased boys, who were the oldest among them, decided to venture into the deep waters and were swept away by the waves without any trace.
They became frightened so they ran away holding their uniforms and that of the two when they met a taxi driver who took them home after narrating the incident to him.
Mr Oblokuteye said a report was quickly made to the Dansoman Police, who accompanied some family members to the beach to inform the fishermen there to be on the lookout for the bodies of the boys.
He said on Sunday, they were informed by the fishermen that the bodies had been washed ashore at the Korle Gonno beach so they went there but the bodies had already been taken away by the Korle-Bu Police.
They proceeded to the police station and they were informed that one of the bodies was washed ashore on Saturday morning and the other on Sunday but both bodies had been deposited at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital mortuary awaiting autopsy while investigations were still underway.
He said the school authorities were notified about the incident and the headmaster, Mr Daniel Johnson, together with the proprietor of the school, Mr Albert Osei Kessi, came to plead with the families to forgive them because they did not know that the boys would go elsewhere aside their homes.

50 VEHICLES FOR PARTIES (Front Page)

19/11/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
FIFTY cross-country pick-up vehicles have been released for distribution to political parties which have 10 or more parliamentary candidates in the December general election.
The vehicles will be distributed on the basis of the number of candidates fielded for the parliamentary elections, with each party qualifying for one vehicle if it fields more than 10 candidates.
The Chairman of the Electoral Commission (EC), Dr Kwadwo Afari-Gyan, who announced this in Accra yesterday at the opening of a one-day forum for parliamentary candidates, said the gesture was to assist in electioneering by the political parties.
He announced that the New Patriotic Party (NPP) and the National Democratic Congress (NDC) would each be allocated 12 vehicles, as the two parties fielded the same number of parliamentary candidates.
He said the Convention People’s Party (CPP) would be given 10 vehicles; the People’s National Convention (PNC), seven; the Democratic Freedom Party (DFP), six; the Democratic People’s Party (DPP), two, while the Reform Patriotic Democrats (RPD) would get one.
Dr Afari-Gyan also announced that copies of the voters register were ready to be collected by the political parties, adding that each party would be given 10 copies.
He stated that the register had been cleaned with the removal of 349,000 names comprising minors, foreigners and the dead, adding that 76,000 people had also engaged in multiple registration. He gave the assurance that the exercise was still ongoing to ensure a clean register during the elections.
He said printing of the ballot papers was well advanced, saying they would be ready way ahead of time before the elections on December 7, 2008.
Dr Afari-Gyan advised the aspiring parliamentarians to report any complaints or differences they might have to the EC, not the media, especially the radio stations which might not be able to solve their problems for them.
The EC Chairman said a number of changes had been made to reduce the number of rejected ballot papers after voting, explaining that this year’s ballot paper would be the longest, with wide, thick black lines to distinguish between candidates.
He said during the polls any fingerprint or mark would be accepted by the EC if it clearly showed the intention of the voter.
He expressed concern over the fact that during the exhibition of the voters register recently only 23 per cent of registered voters showed up to check their names and said that always created problems on voting day.
Dr Afari-Gyan assured all that measures had been put in place by the EC to ensure free, fair and transparent elections and advised parties to appoint good people who could make reasonable judgement as their agents, not macho men.

OIL FIND POSES CHALLENGES FOR INSURANCE AGENCES (Business page)

26/11/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
The Ghana Reinsurance Company Limited will increase its capital base and train staff in oil, gas and energy to take advantage of the emerging oil industry.
“We will endeavour to enhance the technical and professional competence of out team through various educational and training programmes so as to provide the best and most reliable services to our clients”.
Speaking at the Annual General Meeting of the company in Accra today, the Chairperson of the Board of Directors, Mrs Christine Dowuona-Hammond admitted that the licensing of insurance companies posed a great challenge to Ghana Re and that it will step up its marketing activities to widened and increased its premium base.
She said already the company had seen slight increases in its management expenses from GH¢ 6.36 million in 2006 to Gh¢ 6.51 million in 2007, an increase of 2.49 per cent attributable to increased marketing activities.
Mrs Dowuona-Hammond indicated that consequently the company managed to grow its Gross premium Income by 20 percent from GH¢ 29.27 million in 2006 to GH¢ 35.10 million last year.
She said however that the product mix remained relatively the same with non-marine as well as marine and aviation contributing 87.88 per cent and 12.34 percent in 2007 respectively compared to the previous year’s ratio of 88.67 and 11.33 per cent.
She said the company posted a net profit of Gh¢ 10.69 million, an increase of 86.76 percent over and above the Gh¢ 5.72 million recorded in the preceding year adding that included in the profit was GH¢1.98 million and GH¢ 1.98 million accounted for respectively by exchange gain and miscellaneous income out of which GH¢ 1.98 represents from sale of equities.
According to her the company’s balance sheet expanded by 33.12 per cent with an improved capital adequacy and financial security ratios and underwriting exposure measured by net premium to equity improved from 91.70 per cent to 85.89 percent in 2007.
The Chairperson indicated that Ghana Re’s investment portfolio continues to grow and a 30 per cent increase has been recorded in the year under review with a realised return of 8 percent and said the company will continue to restructure its investment portfolio to ensure an optimum mix designed not only to maximise returns on investment but in the main also to ensure that the company always has sufficient funds to meet its obligations as a global reinsurer of choice.
Mrs Dowuana-Hammond stated that Ghana Re in order to positively position itself in anticipation of the eventual withdrawal of the legal cession and also to be able to underwrite a meaningful share of the large risks in the oil and gas industry, urgently needed to enhance its capital base.
“In view of the above the Board of Directors is confident that the proposed resolution to increase the slated capital by the transfer of Gh¢ 4.40 million from income surplus account will be approved by shareholders”, she said.
She said on the recommendation of the management and the board an annual dividend of GH¢1.2 million has been approved for shareholders and this represents 20 per cent over the GH¢1.0 million paid in 2006.
She assured that the company will be resolute in the coming year to market actively and exhibit a strong commitment to its clients as this is the surest way to income growth and sustainability.

538 CASES SETTLED THROUGH ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE RESOLUTION (Page 34)

26/11/2008
Story: Mary Mensah & Jennifer Dornoo

THE Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) settlement mechanism instituted by the Judicial Service disposed of 583 cases between January and September this year.
The cases were settled through mediation in nine district courts within the Accra /Tema metropolis.
Most of the cases had been pending before the law courts for more than 11 years but were settled within two hours or one week by the ADR mechanism.
The ADR was set up in 2003 to determine an appropriate ADR system for the Judicial Service with the aim of reducing the number of cases in the backlog in Courts, provide justice at cheaper, faster and more satisfactory ways to the poor and vulnerable in the communities.
The National Co-ordinator of the ADR, Mr Senyo M. Adjabeng made this known at a press briefing in Accra as part of activities commemorating ADR Week which started on Monday November 17, 2008.
He said most of the cases were civil cases such as property settlement, divorce, land litigation, family dispute and very minor criminal cases such as minor assault.
According to him, as part of the ADR Week, parties with cases pending in court who had not entered any appearance within the past 12 conservative months were afforded to appear in court or had their cases struck out for want of prosecution.
As a result of this summons exercise, more than 1,000 cases were struck out nation-wide during each term of the ADR week.
Mr Adjabeng said the ADR programme of the Judicial Service aims at offering parties in court an opportunity to resolve their disputes by means other than court room trial.
He said in recognition of the need for efficient mechanism for adjudication of cases pending in the courts, the Lord Chief Justice in 2003 set up the ADR Task Force with the objective to determine an appropriate and customised policy direction that incorporated the ADR in the court adjudication process.
Mr Adjabeng said the Task Force recommended the adoption of a court connected ADR system which would use private neutrals in mediating cases referred to the ADR by Magistrates and Judges.
He said based on the recommendations of the Task Force, the Lord Chief Justice issued a policy directive which adopted and incorporated ADR as part of the adjudication process of the Judicial Service of Ghana.
He said the ADR had become an available option to parties in disputes who filed cases in the courts or whose cases were already pending in court.
Mr. Adjabeng said in 2006, the Lord Chief Justice directed that the first week of each legal term be set aside as ADR week during which cases were referred to ADR in selected Magistrate courts to be settled through ADR, and especially through mediation.
He stated that the programme had proven to be one of the most suitable ways of making justice accessible to the poor in the districts and communities because it was free, voluntary, informal and faster for persons with cases before the courts.
He said the programme had resulted in the reduction of a backlog of cases pending before the law courts.
Mr Adjabeng mentioned delay in payments of allowances as some of the challenges facing the programme but indicated that DANIDA was in the process of setting up a fund to take care of the mediators and the ADR programme.

OFFICIALS OF CUSTOMS INTERCEPTED 664 INDIAN HEMP (Front Page)

24/10/2008
Story: Albert K. Salia & Mary Mensah
OFFICIALS of the Customs, Excise and Preventive Service (CEPS) on Thursday evening intercepted 664 kilogrammes of compressed Indian hemp and hashish which had been parcelled for export to the United Kingdom.
The 240 parcels were made up of 192 slabs of compressed cannabis, 40 plastic bowls of hashish and eight cylindrically shaped containers of hashish.
As of the time of filing this report, CEPS officials had made no arrest, as the vehicle which had sent the items was said to have sped off, while the clearing agent, identified as Kennedy Biney, was also let off the hook.
The Chief Collector in charge of Investigations and Narcotics of CEPS, Nana Agyin Buadu, told journalists that not much information had been gathered so far on the exporter.
He explained that the agent had not even started processing the goods for export when it was detected that they were drugs.
The substances had been well packaged and concealed under boxes covered with cocoyam, plantain and Fante kenkey.
According to the chief collector, the vehicle which sent the goods sped off when the driver sensed that CEPS officials inspecting the goods had become suspicious of the contents of the boxes.
Nana Buadu said CEPS dealt with clearing agents and not exporters per se and indicated that it was only when an agent had presented documents for processing that CEPS would know the exporter of an item and the consignee.
Responding to questions, he said the interception was normal, and so was the mode of concealment.
He, however, said it had been a while since such a large quantity of drugs was intercepted at the airport.

OIC LAUNCHES DEV FUND FOR CAMPUS OF EXCELLENCE ( Page 28)

21/10/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
The Opportunities Industrialisation Centre (OIC) in the country has launched a $10 million development fund for the construction of the ‘OIC Campus of Excellence" at East Legon.
The campus will offer vocational and technical skills training for the youth.
In an address read on his behalf, the President, Mr John Agyekum Kufour, said since it started work in the country some 38 years ago OIC had trained over 20,000 youth in vocational and technical skills throughout the country.
He said OIC’s rural development programme which was aimed at increasing food security, improving agricultural production, access to potable water, fostering entrepreneurship and business development as well as providing humanitarian assistance among others had also benefited hundreds of thousands of the poor and disadvantaged.
The President said the current global food, energy and water crisis had created enormous workforce needs, training and capacity building as well as job creation programmes for the youth.
President Kufour said the unique OIC self-help approach to skills training focused on the individual and provided motivational and vocational counselling to develop a positive attitude to work and self discipline and attributed its success to its focus on the practical and theoretical as well as on the job training before certification.
He said OIC’s corporate social responsibility programmes and its partnerships with the largest gold mining companies in Ghana like Newmont, Goldfields and AngloGold Ashanti had also helped to create wealth and enhance economic opportunities for the rural population in mining areas.
The Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Chamber of Mines Ms Joyce Aryee, said in order for Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programmes to work, the government and the private sector must forge a new understanding of the balance of public/private responsibility and develop new governance and business models for creating social values.
She said it was obvious that when CSRs were carried out effectively they added up to the development of the human capital by way of training and education, provision of potable drinking water, building of infrastructure and the creation of industrial harmony for business to thrive.
She indicated that the chamber in 2007 spent $1 million on education, $565,000 on health, $2.8 million on alternative livelihood projects, $220 on water provision and $262, 000 on sanitation amongst others.
Earlier in a welcoming address, the OIC Regional Director, Ms Carla Dominique Denizard, said the OIC movement started in the US in 1969 in an abandoned jail house in Philadelphia and started on the African continent with Ghana, 38 years ago with corporate and donor support.
She said the late Founder of the OIC, Rev Leon H. Sullivan was a renowned African-American Civil Rights leader who contributed to the struggle to end Apartheid in South Africa.
Ms Denizard expressed her appreciation to corporate organisations who had assisted the OIC over the years and called on others to join in to enable the OIC extend its work to all the 10 regions.
She said currently OIC was in eight regions and expressed the hope to extend its operations to the remaining regions.

NPP,NDC MUST HOLD JOINT RALLY FOR PEACE (Page 14)

01/11/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
SOME residents of the Konkomba Market in Accra have complained of insecurity, following recurrent clashes between supporters of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) and the National Democratic Congress (NDC) in the area.
Spokesmen of the residents, who called at the Daily Graphic offices yesterday, said following last week’s violent clashes between the two groups, retaliatory attacks had been a daily occurrence.
They said the police always rushed in to effect the arrest of some troublemakers but released them almost immediately to return to the market and continue with more violence.
According to them, there had not been peace since the clashes and if nothing was done to resolve the impasse it would get out of hand and innocent lives could be lost.
They, therefore, appealed to the leaders of the two political parties to hold a joint rally in the area and educate their supporters about the importance of maintaining peace before, during and after the elections.
The spokesmen, Mohammed Kamil Ahmed and Dr Habib Sulemana, who are members of the Kumbungu Youth Association in the Konkomba Market, also condemned the continued violence and said Ghana was bigger than all political parties.
“We are all one people; why should we kill each other because of politics; we have the right to choose the party we want to belong to but that should not be used to perpetuate violence in the country,” they said.
According to them, there were a number of people from all the regions in the country doing business at the market but it was always a small fraction of people who had been creating tension among the people.
They said these people who were mostly drug users and peddlers always wielded machetes, threatening to slash anybody who dared to challenge them.
Dr Sulemana, a herbal practitioner, said it was always the Dagomba community that suffered whenever these clashes occurred, thus creating the bad impression in the mind of people that they were violent.

UPHOLD INTERGRITY OF JUDICIARY (Page 31)

22/10/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
The Chief Justice, Mrs Georgina Theodora Wood, has charged magistrates to uphold the integrity of the judiciary at all times.
She said members of the bench were expected to be men and women of impeccable character.
Swearing in 18 new career magistrates who have successfully completed a two-year course of study at the Ghana School of Law in Accra yesterday, the Chief Justice stated that integrity was key to judiciary value and when that was compromised, public confidence in the judiciary was eroded.
She announced that a new scheme whereby senior members of the bench would study and evaluate judgements of the lower courts had been instituted.
Mrs Wood said the scheme would be a useful way of monitoring the progress of magistrates by measuring their output and performance, adding that another benefit of the scheme was to find out the weaknesses of the lower courts so that the judges would assist in addressing those difficulties.
She cautioned them not to turn themselves into debt collectors for litigants who appear before them because the rules of the court system had adequate provisions for protecting aggrieved persons.
“Do not go beyond the dictates of the law to please anybody; your provenance is to determine the facts and apply the laws to the findings of fact. And do not become embroiled in the personal lives of litigants who appear before you as this has the effect of undermining institutional integrity”, she said.
The Chief Justice indicated that courtroom etiquette and decorum were crucial to the very survival of magistrates on the bench and it was absolutely important for utmost courtesy to be extended to all who appear before them, especially members of the Bar.
Mrs Wood urged the magistrates to exercise the greatest restraint, even under the most provocative circumstances during the course of their duties, adding that “war of words between magistrates and counsels or litigants and the misuse of coercive powers should be the last weapons you should deploy in the courtroom”.
She expressed the hope that the new career magistrates would make significant contributions to the Ghanaian judiciary and assured them that the older members of the Bench were always available to give them the support, encouragement and any assistance they may need in the course of their duties.
Justice Professor A. K. Kludze, Director of the Career Magistrate Programme, said the course was instituted by the late Chief Justice Acquah and it involved both academic and practical training.
He said the policy was to ensure the highest standards and that its success would depend on the magistrates.
He said the work of the Bench was very difficult but they had been well equipped to take up the challenge.

Skills development workshop for SMEs( Page 34)

20/10/2008

Story: Mary Mensah
A Five-day workshop on developing the skills of Small and Medium-Scale Enterprises (SMEs) in identification, preparation, appraisal and financing of SMEs investment projects opened in Accra on Monday.
The project development appraisal workshop, organised by the National Board for Scale Enterprises (NBSSI) and the Association of Ghana Industries (AGI) for SMEs seeks to train the participants on computer model for feasibility analysis and reporting to enhance their professional capabilities as businessmen, service providers and enhance joint ventureships between SME’s in Ghana and their counterparts in Asian countries.
Drawn from the trade and pharmaceutical industries as well as financial institutions, the workshop is also expected to facilitate trade and promote investment among members of the TECHNONET Africa Network.
The Executive Director of the National Board for Small Scale Industries (NBSSI), Nana (Dr) Baah Boakye, who opened the workshop, said the project was aimed at promoting trade investment among the seven member countries of TECHNONET Africa Network, namely Ghana, Cameroon, Nigeria, South Africa Uganda, Tanzania and Mozambique and Asia.
He said as a result of the slow pace of industrialisation in the south and the growing technological gap between the north and the south, the concept of South-South Global Access and Technology Exchange System (SS-GATE) was launched in Shanghai China, in May 2006.
He said the SS-GATE was to help developing countries to achieve the Millennium Development Goals by the business community and the UN system.
According to him, the SS-GATE system provided a virtual and physical market place for the exchange of assets, technologies and financial resources among developing countries in order to help accelerate economic development and poverty reduction.
Nana Boakye said the NBSSI wanted the SME’s to have a joint ventureship with the counterparts in Asia through the electronic medium of exchange.
He announced that in November, this year, there would be a workshop in Ghana to review the performance of the SS-GATE in four countries.
Those countries, he said, are Ghana, Nigeria, Tanzania and Cameroon and indicated that it would be a follow-up on a visit paid by the Minister of Trade and Industries and the Executive Directors of the NBSSI and the AGI to Thailand, Vietnam and Malaysia. (

JUDICIARY FREE NO INTERFERENCE FROM ANY QUARTERS (Front Page)

18/10/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
THE Chief Justice, Mrs Georgina Theodora Wood, has asked Ghanaians to disabuse their minds of the perception that the judiciary is under the thumb of influential persons in society, particularly the executive arm of government.
She made it clear that the judiciary was independent and that nobody interfered with its work.
Mrs Wood made the comments in Accra on Thursday when executive members of the Ghana Journalists Association (GJA), led by its President, Mr Ransford Tetteh, called on her in the Supreme Court building to formally invite her to be the Guest Speaker at the 13th GJA Awards night scheduled for October 25, 2008 at the Banquet Hall.
“Even at my level, I have made it a policy not to ask any judge how he or she is handling any case because of the tendency to misconstrue that to be interference,” she said.
She reiterated that Ghanaian judges were competent and independent in their thoughts and take decisions based on law and no other consideration and that they were bold in the discharge of their duties.
According to her, in spite of the numerous challenges, the country could boast a strong judiciary system and it was important for all stakeholders to work hard to maintain the peace and stability the country currently enjoyed.
Mrs Wood stated that a five-day workshop for the judiciary and court workers had been organised at the Supreme Court in which some resource persons from Kenya and Rwanda participated to share their experiences with their Ghanaian counterparts.
She said Rwanda lost its entire judiciary as a result of the genocide and was now in the process of recruiting young lawyers to work as judges, adding that “it is very difficult to rebuild from the ashes of destruction”.
The Chief Justice said Kenya held Ghana in high esteem because of the role President J. A. Kufour played during the violence that characterised the disputed polls in that country in December last year.
She said if the judiciary was destroyed, it would not be easy to rebuild it from scratch and said lessons from the two countries must teach us to protect our national institutions because they were very difficult to rebuild when destroyed.
Mrs Wood recalled her recent visit to Brazil and said in that country radio and television stations had been set up as part of the judicial system whereby judicial proceedings were broadcast live, while those from the regions were recorded and broadcast later to give the people a feel of the judicial proceedings in the country.
The Chief Justice said this was a good exercise and the judiciary was considering something like that because it recognised the power of the media in informing and educating the people.
Mr Tetteh said this year’s event would be unique because journalists from Cote d’ Ivoire, Togo and the Democratic Republic of Congo would participate in the highly patronised programme to celebrate excellence in journalism.
He said the media had a crucial role to play in the upcoming elections, as well as all the arms of government in order to showcase Ghana as a model of democracy and good governance.
Mr Tetteh said the media would support efforts to promote peace in the country and this year’s event was on the theme “Using the media to promote peace and stability in an election year”.

DV LOTTERY LAUNCHED IN ACCRA (Page 28)

10/9/2008
Story: Mary Mensah & Charles Benoni Okine
THE Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service will soon embark on a swoop on Internet cafes which use their set ups to defraud unsuspecting applicants of the US Diversity Visa (DV) Lottery.
It said it would also not spare those who portrayed themselves as visa contractors and charged various sums of money under the pretext of helping people to apply for the free lottery being organised by the US State Department to offer immigrants from all over the world the opportunity to live and work legally in the US.
Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) Mr Felix Mawusi, Second in Command at the Commercial Crime Unit of the CID, said this at a news conference organised by the US Embassy in Accra to launch the 2010 DV Lottery (DV-2010).
He said some persons had turned themselves into DV Lottery contractors, going round tertiary institutions across the country for information on students which they later altered to suit their purposes.
DSP Mawusi said those contractors forced marriages of convenience on winners and when they were granted visas they seized their passports, demanding money before they released them.
He said it was wrong to engage somebody to enter the lottery on one’s behalf and advised all prospective applicants do so themselves.
The Head of the Consular Section of the US Embassy, Mr Michael Evans, warned that the Embassy would not allow criminals to hijack the programme which was instituted in 1990.
He said 4,000 Ghanaians who won the lottery in 2008 had already been issued with their visas but the 7,000 who won it for 2009 were yet to be screened.
He advised prospective visa lottery applicants that winning the lottery was not a guarantee that they would be automatically issued with the immigrant visas.
Mr Evans said for the first time, applicants for the DV-2010 lottery could check the status of their entries online.
"The State Department warns applicants to be wary of fraudulent schemes asking for money, fraudulent e-mails or websites posing as official US government sites," he warned.
He said each person might enter the lottery only once, saying that spouses might each submit an application.

SEMINAR FOR TURBOENGINES OPENED IN ACCRA ( BUSINESS PAGE)

29/9/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
Mechanical Lloyd Company Limited, distributors of BMW and Ford vehicles today organised a day seminar on Turbocharged engines to its customers.
The aim of the seminar is to explain the construction, functioning, benefits and care of the turbocharged engines to erase the misconception being held by many that they are not good for the environment.
The Service Manager of the company, Mr Towy Carinus said many people held the perception that turbocharged engines started operating between 10 and 15 years ago but its history spans more than 100 years.
Explaining how the Turbocharger works, he said it is a simple but high precision machine that increase engine power output, improved fuel consumption, improved emissions, altitude compensation and lower operating costs among others.
He said the waste exhausts gas instead of being lost is used to spin turbine wheel that spins a compressor wheel enabling more air to be forced into the engine.
He said the advantage of compressing the air is that it lets the engine squeeze more air into a cylinder which means more power can be addedand one can get more power from each explosion in each cylinder.
Mr Carinus said a turbocharger also helps at high altitudes where the air is less dense, normal engines will experience reduced power at high altitudes and though a turbocharged engine may also have slightly reduced power but the reduction will be far less dramatic because the thinner air is easier for the turbocharger to pump and the exhaust back pressure is also reduced.


PICTURE Shows Mr Towy Carinus, Service Manager of Mechanical Lloyd Company Limited explaining how the Turbocharger works to some of its clients at the seminar.Seminar

Friday, November 21, 2008

POLICE INDISPENSABLE IN POOLS (Political Page)

3/10/08
Article: Mary Mensah
The Police are indispensable in the conduct of a free and fair elections. Without the police, maintaining law and order before, during and after election could be difficult.
It is in this connection that Ghanaians are anxious to know the role the police would play in this years general election.
Already violence experienced in some parts of the country attest to the need for the police to be on top of the electoral processes. This requires effective and proactive measures to ensure that the country maintains it profile as a stable democratic country.
As the election approaches there has been series of electoral violence in some parts of the country leading to the perception of insecurity and mayhem, and the spectre of a Kenya or a Zimbabwe occurring here in Ghana.
It is worthy to note that to demonstrate their preparedness for the forthcoming elections, the police have put in place measures to inject efficiency in their operations throughout the country.
23,000 troops will be deployed throughout the country to maintain law and order as well as ensure the smooth running of the electoral process. Security personnel would be deployed to all the centres and areas identify to be flash points would have more security.
To make the work of the police force more professional a National, Regional and District Elections Security Task Forces had been formed as part of the efforts by the police to ensure a peaceful polls and they are already holding a series of fora with the political parties to address their concerns and also collaborate with them to ensure peaceful elections.
Regional Police Commanders are chairing the task force and other members of the task forces in the various regions include representatives from the Ghana Immigration Service, the Ghana Armed Forces, the Bureau of National Investigations (BNI), the Ghana National Fire Service, the Ghana Prisons Service and the Customs, Excise and Preventive Service (CEPS).
The rest are the Chief Directors from the Regional Co-ordinating Councils, the regional directors of the Electoral Commission (EC), the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) and the Information Services Department (ISD).
The task force would ensure that at every given moment there was peace and that the security of the elections was guaranteed.
Since it started work, the task force had identified all the flash points from different perspectives and had mapped up appropriate strategies to deal with them.
The Police have assured all the electorate in the country that there will be adequate security before, during and after the elections and all cases that will be reported to them will be speedily investigated and any person found culpable will be dealt with accordingly.
They have also come out with guidelines to the personnel to ensure a free and fair elections and the dos and don’ts during the electoral processes.
The guidelines which had been circulated to all security personnel is to ensure the safety and security of all elections materials by guarding and escorting them and ensure that voters' queue are orderly managed.
They will also take all necessary measures to prevent violence before, during and after elections and prevent any activity that threatens to disrupt the process.
Carry out lawful instructions of presiding or returning officer of the electoral Commission in relation to the election and stand at the end of the queue at 5 p.m. prompt to ensure no person joins it after 5:00 p.m.
Security personnel are under strict intructions not to take part in the actual administration of the elections, checking ID cards of voters or taking part in the counting of votes and are not to harass or intimidate any candidate or voter. Don’t be partisan, in your actions.
REGISTRATION/ ELECTORAL OFFENCES
The Police has also reminded the electorates that registering or attempting to register as a voter when they know that they do not qualify to do so, registering or attempting to register as a voter more than once at the same registration centre, registering or attempting to register as a voter at more than one registration centre in the country is an offence.
Registering or attempting to register as a voter in the name of another person, dead or alive or preventing or attempting to prevent any person by force or threat of force, either by physical or spiritual from registering as a voter is also an offence.
Knowingly giving false information about oneself for registration as a voter or giving false information about another person for registration as a voter, forging, defacing or destroying any official voter registration paper, challenging or objecting to the registration of a person you know to be qualified, giving voters registration material to any person who is not a registration officer.
Printing any form relating to voters registration without authority from Electoral Commission, disrupting proceeding at a registration centre and doing anything to interfere with the work of a registration official or offering anything to a person to stop him or her from registering to vote.
ELECTORAL OFFENCES CONTINUED
It is an offence to give your voter ID card to another person to vote, forge or counterfeit or fraudulently destroy a ballot paper or the official mark on a ballot paper.
Supplying of ballot paper to any person without authority or selling or offering to sell a ballot paper to any person, purchase or offer to purchase a ballot paper from any person.
If you intentionally put anything other than the ballot paper into the ballot box possess a ballot paper which has been marked with official mark without authorisation, Open, take, destroy or interfere with a ball to box, ballot paper in use or intended to be used for the purposes of an election.
Printing of a ballot paper or anything capable of being used as a ballot paper at an election or making a mark on a ballot paper issued to somebody with the intention of it being counted as the vote of that person is an offence.
Voting at an election at which one is not entitled to vote and voting more than once at an election or interfering with the work of a presiding officer.
Remove posters lawfully posted in connection with the election compel somebody to vote in a particular way, Impede or prevent a otter from freely exercising his/her right to vote Assist a political party or candidate to gain unfair advantage over others, Make or publish by written or spoken word or by song, a false statement about the personal character of a candidate or the conduct of a political party.
RELATIONSHIP WITH THE MEDIA
The media were not left out in the plans and security personnel has been advised that the media plays a crucial role in the democratic dispensation of the country and all efforts must be made to assist them in the discharge of their duties.
Personnel had been charged to be are to polite to the media, not intimidate them not give information that can or may jeopardise the conduct of the elections and rather they are to refer media personnel to Public Affairs Director/Unit, or command Headquarters.
GENERAL CONDUCT
On a general conduct the police personnel has been advise to be always alert on duty, punctual, to threat everyone fairly be open and honest. Provide a responsible effective and high-quality service with honesty and integrity Be a team player Use minimum force only when necessary.
They are to refuse gifts, presents, favours, gratitude or promises that could be interpreted as seeking to influence the security officer in the performance of his/her official responsibilities.
Do not leave your polling station during voting, and before counting and declaration of results. After the voting exercise, ensure the security of the ballot boxes to designated sites.
The National Security has given Ghanaians the assurance that the December parliamentary and presidential polls will be held in an atmosphere of peace.
It affirmed that the security apparatus of the country had, in times past, stood the test of time and would rise to the occasion once again to avert any possible threat to the state as the elections approached.
The security agencies has also assured all political parties and the electorate that it will be fair, firm, transparent and neutral in its work before, during and after the December elections.
To this end the security had organised various training programmes to sharpened the skills of its personnel in order to enable them discharge their duties effectively and efficiently.

Monday, October 27, 2008

EUMETSAT User forum opens in Accra (Page 3)

3/10/08

Story: Mary Mensah
THE European Organisation for the Exploration of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT) is to hold its 8th EUMETSAT User Forum in Africa in Ghana.
The programme, which starts today, is on the theme, “Use of Satellite Data for Monitoring Climate Change and Water Resources”.
More than 150 meteorological experts from Africa and Europe are expected to attend the forum.
Briefing the press in Accra, the International Relations Officer of EUMETSAT, Dr Vincent Gabaglio, said the organisation organised the user forum in Africa on a biennial basis and each time in a different African country.
He said the aim was to reinforce the already well-established dialogue between EUMETSAT and African user communities and their national meteorological services in order to optimise the use of satellite data and products in Africa.
Dr Gabaglio said the forum would also offer an excellent opportunity for the users of satellite to provide direct feedback and recommendations to EUMETSAT, which would be considered when preparing future activities.
He said during the forum, demonstration stands would be set up at the entrance of the Accra International Conference Centre, where the forum would be held, to showcase the use of EUMETSAT satellite images, data and products in various applications — meteorology, oceanography, marine, etc.
Dr Gabaglio said at the end of the forum, it was expected that a clear set of recommendations would be agreed upon by all parties.
A Director at the Scientific Division of the Meteorological Department, Mr Andrew Nkansah, said Ghana started using satellite in 1989 and currently had two receiving stations.
He said one of the new systems had been installed at the Kotoka Airport to serve the aviation industry, while a back-up had been placed at the headquarters of the meteo office to monitor other activities.
He said EUMETSAT had enhanced the capacity of the images that came through satellite, saying that was very useful for meteo operations in the country and elsewhere in Africa.

FOUR NABBED FOR PRINTING FAKE CURRENCY (Page 28)

28/09/08
Story: Mary Mensah
Four men believed to be members of a money printing syndicate which has been circulating fake GH¢20, Gh¢10 and GH¢5 in the country have been arrested by the Madina Police in Accra.
The four, said to be operating at Asylum Down in Accra, are said to be part of a bigger syndicate, and that the police were on the heels of other members of the group currently on the run.
Bundles of large quantities of the printed currency notes concealed in a black suitcase, fake $100 bills, computers, inkjet printers, a pistol with ammunitions, five computer hard disks, 13 cartridges with different colours and money wrappers, among others, were found in the house where the police said the syndicate operated from.
Those arrested are Joseph Osafo, a 26-year-old graphic designer and leader of the syndicate, Appiah Kubi, 30, Frank Owusu, 28, and Stephen Kofi Nortey Kommey, 20.
According to the Madina Divisional Police Commander, Chief Superintendent Paul Ayitey, the modus operandi of the group was to travel to the various regions during market days to circulate the fake money to traders.
He said two members of the group who were on their way to Koforidua in the Eastern Region with large quantities of the money were arrested at the Ayi Mensah barrier by plain clothes personnel who had laid ambush for them.
Chief Supt Ayitey said on September 24, 2008 the Madina police had information about the syndicate who had planned to circulate the fake currency inKoforidua on a market day.
He said based on that information a group of personnel were quickly dispatched to the Ayi Mensah barrier where they laid ambush and at about 10:00 a.m. a taxi pulled up with two occupants.
He said when the two men were searched bundles of the fake currency were found in their pockets and some compartments of the taxi.
The commander said the two suspects, both traders, told the police during interrogation that the supplier of the fake notes lived at Asylum Down.
He said they led the police to the house at Asylum Down where Osafo lives, and he was arrested together with another suspect, and the aforementioned items seized from him.
Chief Supt Ayitey said following interrogation Joseph admitted the offence and claimed he started circulating the currency about two months ago and mentioned other accomplices.
Investigations are continuing.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

CHURCH ELDERS DONATE TO POLICE HOSPITAL (Page 47)

29/09/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
Ministers and Elders of the Ghana Police church have presented various items valued at GH¢8000 to the Police Hospital at a ceremony in Accra.
The items include bedside cabinets, wheel chairs, screens, furniture, disposable gloves, theatre boots wardrobes and air conditioners.
The church has also adopted the female ward of the hospital and pledged to expand and refurbish the reception area to make waiting more comfortable.
Presenting the items, the Superintendent Minister, Very Rev Twum-Baah of the church said the presentation forms part of the church's social responsibility.
He said on a recent visit the elders of the church realised that the hospital lacked certain basic facilities so they decided to help.
He pledged the church’s continuous support to the hospital and expressed the hope that the items will assist the hospital in providing quality service to patients.
Dr Godfried Asiamah, Medical Director of the hospital who received the items thanked the church for the gesture.
He said the government alone cannot provide all the needs of the hospital, adding that such initiatives from the public were always welcome.

CAPTION

Picture: Dr Asiamah, (left) in a handshake with Very Rev Twum-Baah, Chaplain of the church.

2 COPS INTERDICTED FOR ALLEGED EXTORTION (Page 19)

29/09/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
TWO policemen who allegedly extorted GH¢25,000 from a student at Madina have been interdicted by the Police Administration.
General Lance Corporal Emmanuel Awadzie, stationed at the Adentan Police Station and Lance Corporal Solomon Awuku of the Madina police have been placed in police custody and are currently assisting the police in their investigations.
The Director of the Police Public Affairs Directorate, DSP Kwesi Ofori, who disclosed this to the Daily Graphic in Accra, said at about 11.00 p.m. on September 10, 2008, Lance Cpl Awadzie sought the assistance of Cpl Awuku at the Madina Police Station to assist him arrest the student at his house at Akatsi Abor, a suburb of Madina, for an unknown offence.
He said the two policemen drove in Awadzie’s car to the Agbogba Police Post and reported to another policeman on duty at the charge office that they needed assistance to effect the arrest of a wanted suspect.
He said after Cpl Awadzie had convinced the third policeman to believe that they were indeed performing an official assignment, he made entries into the station notebook, picked a riffle and followed the two.
DSP Ofori said between 1.00 am and 2.00 a.m. the three policemen broke into the room of the complainant while he was in bed with his fiancee.
He said they told the complainant that he was on the police wanted list at headquarters and they had been sent to effect his arrest for investigations.
DSP Ofori said they arrested and handcuffed the complainant and the girlfriend after which they ransacked the whole room in search of money.
When they failed in getting any money in the complainant’s room, they packed a computer with accessories together with some documents into a VW Passat saloon car with registration number GR 979 Z belonging to the complainant.
They asked the complainant where he had kept his money and after threatening to shoot him he told them that the money was at the house of his girlfriend.
They drove the complainant and his girlfriend to her house where they collected the GH¢25,000.00 and afterwards released them and sped off in their car thus abandoning the complainant's car.
A complaint was later lodged at the Madina Police Station and the policeman from Agbogba police was arrested because he was in uniform during the incident.
Upon interrogation, he mentioned the two others as those who sought his assistance to help in apprehending a wanted suspect from his hideout.
DSP Ofori said since the beginning of the year, 74 police officers had been dismissed from the service for gross misconduct.
He said 91 personnel were also sacked in 2007, adding that this was being done to inject sanity into the service to serve as a deterrent to others.

4 ARRESTED FOR PRINTING FAKE CEDIS (Page 14)

29/09/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
Four men believed to be members of a money printing syndicate which has been circulating fake GH¢20, Gh¢10 and GH¢5 in the country have been arrested by the Madina Police in Accra.
The four, said to be operating at Asylum Down in Accra, are said to be part of a bigger syndicate, and that the police were on the heels of other members of the group currently on the run.
Bundles of large quantities of the printed currency notes concealed in a black suitcase, fake $100 bills, computers, inkjet printers, a pistol with ammunitions, five computer hard disks, 13 cartridges with different colours and money wrappers, among others, were found in the house where the police said the syndicate operated from.
Those arrested are Joseph Osafo, a 26-year-old graphic designer and leader of the syndicate, Appiah Kubi, 30, Frank Owusu, 28, and Stephen Kofi Nortey Kommey, 20.
According to the Madina Divisional Police Commander, Chief Superintendent Paul Ayitey, the modus operandi of the group was to travel to the various regions during market days to circulate the fake money to traders.
He said two members of the group who were on their way to Koforidua in the Eastern Region with large quantities of the money were arrested at the Ayi Mensah barrier by plain clothes personnel who had laid ambush for them.
Chief Supt Ayitey said on September 24, 2008 the Madina police had information about the syndicate who had planned to circulate the fake currency inKoforidua on a market day.
He said based on that information a group of personnel were quickly dispatched to the Ayi Mensah barrier where they laid ambush and at about 10:00 a.m. a taxi pulled up with two occupants.
He said when the two men were searched bundles of the fake currency were found in their pockets and some compartments of the taxi.
The commander said the two suspects, both traders, told the police during interrogation that the supplier of the fake notes lived at Asylum Down.
He said they led the police to the house at Asylum Down where Osafo lives, and he was arrested together with another suspect, and the aforementioned items seized from him.
Chief Supt Ayitey said following interrogation Joseph admitted the offence and claimed he started circulating the currency about two months ago and mentioned other accomplices.
Investigations are continuing.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

DEC 7 POLLS WILL BE PEACEFUL-AMOO (Page 3 Lead)

24/09/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
THE National Security Co-ordinator, Dr Sam Amoo, has given the assurance that the December parliamentary and presidential polls will be held in an atmosphere of peace.
He affirmed that the security apparatus of the country had, in times past, stood the test of time and would rise to the occasion once again to avert any possible threat to the state as the elections approached.
Speaking at a two-day Election Monitoring and Policing seminar for Police commanders and members of the National, Regional and District Elections Security Task Force in Accra, Dr Amoo said the perception of insecurity and mayhem, and the spectre of a Kenya or a Zimbabwe occurring here, would not happen.
The seminar is being sponsored by the British High Commission.
He said although it was widely acclaimed that Ghana was a peaceful country, the security apparatus would not take any chances for the electoral process to be threatened.
"We have planned and will effectively execute the necessary security measures to ensure peace and stability before, during and after Election 2008," he said.
The co-ordinator said the seminar was timely, in view of the fact that the upcoming presidential and parliamentary elections were less than three months away and given the backdrop of the anxiety currently being generated about them.
He said the topics for discussion included the electoral law and electoral offence, the role of the media in elections, the role of civil society in elections and democracy and human rights and the management of election conflicts.
Dr Amoo expressed the hope that all Ghanaians, irrespective of their political affiliations, would be governed by the rules, regulations and guidelines set out by the Electoral Commission to ensure peaceful elections in December 2008.
He urged the participants to approach the seminar with seriousness in order to be fully prepared for the challenges they would encounter in December.
For his part, the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Mr Patrick Kwarteng Acheampong, said since its inception in May this year, the National Elections Task Force had made steady progress.
He said a budget had been approved and members of the various sub-committees were doing their final rounds of tours in the regions to confirm earlier analyses and assessments.
The IGP said the seminar had five parts, saying the remaining four would be held in Kumasi, Tamale, Takoradi and Ho and that at the end of it all members would have improved on their store of information on the elections and the general overview of analyses and assessment countrywide.
The Political Officer of the British High Commission, Ms Rosie Tapper, said the commission had spent £500,000 in training the police, of which the seminar formed part.
She said the High Commission was confident that the elections would proceed smoothly and that there would be no room for complacency.
The Deputy Chairman of the Electoral Commission, Mr David Kanga, said the laws on the electoral process were many but the crucial ones would be made available to the public.
He called on the participants to act professionally during the elections and disseminate the right information to avoid any clashes.

Friday, September 26, 2008

GHANA IMPROVES RATING ON CORRUPTION INDEX (Page 21)

25/09/2008

Story: Mary Mensah
Ghana Scored 3.9 out of the maximum possible score of 10 and ranked 67 on the list of 180 countries included in the 2008 Corruption Perception Index (CPI) of Transparency International.
This represents an improvement of 0.2 over Ghana’s 2007 ranking of 69 with a score of 3.7 just as last year’s score was an improvement over the 2006 performance.
The Executive Secretary of the Ghana Integrity Initiative, Mr Vitus Azeem, who announced this at a press briefing to launch Transparency International’s 2008 CPI, said this year’s score took Ghana back to its highest score ever of 3.9 that it obtained only in 2002.
He attributed Ghana’s improvement to the enactment of laws aimed at promoting transparency and accountability, considered the basis in the fight against corruption in the country.
He said the creation and support of anti-corruption or accountability institutions by the government and development partners such as DANIDA, GTZ, USAID and DFID had played an important role in getting Ghana this score.
Mr Azeem said it was unfortunate that Ghana had not reached the pass mark after eight years of zero tolerance for corruption but had taken it five years to return to its first-time high score attained in 2002, adding that with the current rate Ghana would reach the 50 per cent mark in 10 years or more.
The Executive Director indicated that the low levels of enforcement of anti-corruption laws, the newspaper reports about alleged corruption that the government did little about and the impunity with which public officials reacted to such allegations, no doubt explained Ghana’s failure to score even 4.0 on the TI’s CPI.
“Thus, while we might rejoice at the improvement of the scores from 3.7 to 3.9 we should recognise that there is more to be done. In fact the trend should awaken us to the fact that we are far from winning the fight against corruption, which also frustrates our fight against poverty reduction, disease, ignorance and efforts to reach the middle-income status,” he said.
He said globally, Denmark, New Zealand and Sweden shared the highest score of 9.3 followed immediately by Singapore at 9.2 with Somalia in the rear with 1.0 slightly trailing Iraq and Myanmar at 1.3 and Haiti at 1.4.
He said Botswana topped Africa’s performance list with 5.8 followed by Mauritius at 5.5, South Africa 4.9 and Namibia 4.5.
Spelling out what needed to be done by the current President and whoever would take over from him come January 2009, Mr Azeem called for the fast-track passage of the freedom of Information Law, to ensure that the Assets Declaration Law was complied with and that disclosures could be verified, among others.

Friday, September 19, 2008

TRAINING PROGRAMME ON COMBATING CRIME HELD IN ACCRA (Centre Spread0

19/08/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
A five-day training programme aimed at combating drug trade, money laundering and organised crime in Ghana by the use of a common Software Application System (SAS) has ended in Accra.
The programme was organised by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crimes (UNODC) in collaboration with INTERPOL and the US Department of Justice.
Participants were drawn from the Narcotics Control Board (NACOB), the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) and detectives from the Republic of Togo.
Closing the training in Accra, the Chairman of the NACOB Board, Gen (rtd) Joshua Hamidu, called on the security agencies to share intelligence in order to combat the drug menace.
He said people involved in the drug trade were dangerous and heartless, conducted their activities in secrecy and were willing to do anything to have their way.
He said due to the nature of their work, there was the need for NACOB officials, the police, Customs, Excise and Preventive Services (CEPS), Immigration and other security agencies to collaborate in the fight against drug trafficking.
The chairman, therefore, called on them to involve themselves in serious intelligence gathering and sharing.
Gen Hamidu said, “as investigators you will become vulnerable with lots of money being put before you to influence you but you must be firm in order to overcome such temptations, the welfare of the nation must be your priority”.
He urged participants to share whatever knowledge they had acquired with their colleagues in order to bring the drug situation in the country under control.
According to Mr Vincent Davies from the INTERPOL Secretariat in Lyon, France, using the new database called the Real Time Analytical Intelligence Database (RAID) would enable Ghana share information on drug trafficking, money laundering and other related crimes within the West African sub-region.
Mr Davies said the RAID facility had been installed at the premise of the NACOB to exploit information and build cases on organised crimes.
He said the facility which included computers, scanners, telephone and other gadgets would record key pieces of information and would quickly identify links among people, places, businesses, financial accounts and telephone numbers, among other things.
On his part, Mr Mark Nolta, one of the trainers from the US Department of Justice National Drug Intelligence said RAID would provide a common platform for security agencies from all countries in the sub-region to fight organised crimes.
He said already the device had been used in over 700 investigations in the US and had assisted in the arrest of several criminals and organised groups.
He expressed the hope that the device would help countries in the sub-region to fight drug traffickers and other dangerous crimes.

POLICE DISPATCHES EXPERTS TO TAMALE (Page3)

03/09/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
THE Police Administration has constituted a team of police experts to investigate the alleged disappearance of weapons from the Tamale Police Armoury.
A former police officer, Inspector Kwaku Johnson, alleged on an Accra-based radio station yesterday that a number of rifles and ammunitions had been stolen from the Tamale armoury and sold to civilians, who use them to commit violent crime and to fuel the ethnic conflict in the Northern Region.
To help the team in their investigation, the Police Administration further announced the arrest of Regimental Sergeant Major (RSM) Mahama Nantogma, who was in charge of the police armoury in Tamale.
The team is made up of officers from the Arms and Ammunition Registry of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) headquarters, the Police Intelligence and Professional Standard Bureau and the Internal Audit Directory.
In addition to the investigations, the team is also to conduct a thorough audit of the weapon facilities of the police in the Northern Region.
According to the Director of the Police Public Affairs Directorate, DSP Kwesi Ofori, the team has already been dispatched to give effect to the administrative orders of the high command.
He said the outcome of the investigations would be made known to the public to assure Ghanaians that the police Administration would do whatever it could to ensure the safety of the people at all times.
He said the administration was determined to flush out all miscreants and indisciplined cops from the system.

CHANGES IN POLICE SERVICE (Centre Spread)

03/09/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
THE Police Administration has made some changes in the regions as part of measures to strengthen the service.
All the changes take immediate effect. The Northern Regional Police Commander, Commissioner of Police (COP) Ephraim Oko Brakatu is to move to the national headquarters to head the Special Duties Unit.
COP Brakatu is expected to help strengthen the co-ordination between the national headquarters and the various regions and in addition carry out special assignments as directed by the Inspector General of Police (IGP) to enhance general policing in the country.
The Director of the Police Public Affairs Directorate, DSP Kwesi Ofori, who disclosed this in Accra yesterday, said DCOP Ofosu Mensah-Gyeabour, the Upper East Regional Police Commander, would move to the Northern Region but would temporarily supervise the Northern, the Upper East and Upper West regions to ensure cohesion of police operational activities and peace enforcement in some conflict spots in the region.
He said the Central Regional Police Commander, DCOP Rose Bio-Atinga, was now to head the Service Workshop in Accra, where she is to assist in improving the workshop operations.
DSP Ofori said DCOP Bio-Atinga was one time responsible for the Technical Directorate of the service and her experience would help improve operations at the workshop, as well as the fleet of police vehicles.
Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Akayire Kampara, Agona Swedru Divisional Commander moves to the Central Region as Regional Commander and ACP Mahama Hamidu, Second in Command of the Upper East Region is now the substantive commander.
Chief Supt Fred Agyapong Asare of the Goaso Division of the Brong Ahafo Region is to head the East Gonja Division (Salaga)/ Northern Region and Supt Francis Aryitey Aryee is the Special Operations Assistant at the National Police Headquarters, Accra.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

COURT RESTRAINS TWO GBESE FACTIONS (Centre Spread)

14/08/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
A District Magistrate’s Court in Accra has restrained the two parties in the Gbese chieftaincy dispute from taking part in this year’s Ga Mashie Homowo festival scheduled for Saturday, August 16, 2008.
The Accra Regional Police Commander, DCOP Oppong Buanuah, who disclosed this in an interview in Accra yesterday, said information reaching the police indicated that there was the likelihood of breaches of peace at Ga Mashie and its environs over the celebrations.
He said following that information, the police on August 5, 2008 filed an affidavit at the James Town District Magistrate’s Court in support of an ex-parte motion for an interim injunction restraining both parties from sprinkling ‘kpokpoi.’
DCOP Buanuah said the police had no option but to take the action in order to maintain the peace in the area.
He said until the claim of the true custodian of the Gbese stool was legally settled, tension would remain in Gbese and its environs.
He named the parties in the dispute as Nii Okaidja III, Christopher Ayittey Adjin, Elder Samuel Agoe Okaidja, Nii Ayikumah Dinseh and Asafoatse Dinsey.
The others are Nii Ayi-Bonte also known as Tommy Okine, Nii Okai Kasablofo Adjin IV, Nii Armah Quaye, Nii Ayikwei Okai and Nii Okai Keteku.
The commander said the police would strongly enforce the order of the court and advised the two parties to adhere to the court’s order by maintaining peace and tranquillity during the Homowo celebrations.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

ACCOUNTANT NABBED FOR POSTING GHOST NAMES ON PAYROLL

8/08/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
AN accountant at the head office of the Ghana Highway Authority (GHA), who allegedly posted 16 ghost names on the payroll of his employers, has been arrested by the La Police in Accra.
The suspect, Kofi Nudokpo Tordzagbo, 39, was arrested together with two accomplices at the Trade Fair branch of the Barclays Bank in Accra where they had gone to cash the June salaries.
Between April and May, this year, the suspects were said to have managed to cash GH¢27, 210 out of GH¢75, 581 which was paid into different accounts at the Barclays Bank by the Controller and the Accountant General’s Department.
The accomplices are Godwin Wonder, 40 and Christian Dzamade, 25, both unemployed.
According to the La District Police Commander, Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) Richard Gyebi, all the three suspects were family members from Akatsi in the Volta Region.
He said on June 6, 2008, Godwin and Christian went to open new accounts at the Trade Fair branch of the Barclays Bank with photocopies of their voter ID cards.
He said the two left the bank after the branch manager refused and asked them to produce the original copies of the ID cards.
After that nothing was heard from them until June 30, 2008 when they resurfaced at the bank with the original ID cards with a letter introducing them as new employees from the GHA.
After careful examination of the letter, the branch manager suspected it to be fake so he ordered their arrest by the bank’s security who later handed them over to the police.
When they were searched five voter ID cards bearing the same picture but under different names, two cheques one bearing the names Addison Aikins and Christian Dzamadi and social security forms also filled with different names were found on them.
Upon interrogation they broke down and confessed that it was their brother who was an accountant at the GHA, who inserted their names on the payroll and asked them to cash the money for him for a fee.
While investigations were on-going, Tordzagbo appeared at the police station on July 2, 2008 to bail out the suspects and he was subsequently arrested.
Investigations revealed that between March and June, 2007, Tordzagbo, who is also the liaison officer, managed to prepare new entrants forms for new employees, forged signatures of his superior officers and forwarded them to the Controller and Accountant General’s Department for processing.
The usual practice was that all new entrants’ imputs or forms should pass through the Treasury at the Ministry of Transport, but that of the 16 new employees never passed there because Tordzagbo managed to the get the stamps of the ministry and the appropriate signatures through forgery.
When the names of the 16 ghost employees were taken to the Barclays Bank for their statements, it turned out that Godwin had seven accounts with different branches of the bank while Christian had seven accounts.
Between April and June this year, monies paid into the accounts of the 16 ghost employees totalled GH¢75, 581 and out of this amount the suspects were said to have been able to cash GH¢27, 210 at the time of their arrest.
The accounts have been frozen while investigations continue.

CALL FOR CONCERTED EFFORTS TO FIGHT HUMAN TRAFFICKING (PAGE 20 LEAD)

8/08/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
(call for concerted efforts to fight human trafficking)
The Deputy Tema Regional Police Commander has called for a multi-faceted approach on the part of all law enforcement agencies in combating the human trafficking menace to bringing it under control.
He said the Human Trafficking Law (Act 694) would be strictly enforced by the police to bring the perpetrators of this heinous crime to book to serve as a deterrent to others.
Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) R. M. Ninson said this at a sensitisation durbar at Kpone-on-Sea near Tema to educate the people about the dangers of human trafficking.
He said human trafficking was a growing problem in all parts of the world because it had become a major revenue earner for organised criminal groups and a source of political, social and economic insecurity for states, as well as for individuals.
He said human trafficking mainly involved women and children who were taken from rural or deprived areas to the commercial and urban centres under the pretext of helping them, but end up as domestic servants, hawkers, commercial sex workers, truck pushers and fisher boys, who went under water to disentangle nets leading to some of them dying under the sea.
ACP Ninson said some of the perpetrators of the crime used different methods including abduction, outright sale of children by parents, bonded placement and deceit of parents in acquiring their victims.
He said the menace had a lot of bad effect on the individual, community and the country as a whole and it was upon that that in 2005 Ghana passed the human trafficking law to deal with all forms of trafficking, both domestically and internationally.
He said any person who violated the law was liable to a term of imprisonment not less than five years and advised members of the community with any information on any such crime to inform the police for immediate action to be taken.
For his part, ASP K. Akowuah from the Tema Regional Police said studies had shown that Ghana was becoming a source, transit point and destination country.
He said results of human trafficking were poverty, illiteracy, drug addition and increase in violent crimes such as armed robbery, among others.
The officer in charge of the Migration Management Bureau of the Ghana Immigration Service, Ms Judith Dzokoto, said in the past people blamed this abuse of human trafficking on ignorance but that was no excuse for breaking the law now.
She, therefore, called on all Ghanaians to join hands in the fight against human trafficking to weed it out of the country.
The Chief of Kpone, Nii Tetteh Otu, advised members of the community to report anybody suspected of dealing in human trafficking in order to save the children from this wicked people.
He said children were the future leaders of the nation and all efforts must be made to safeguard them and enable them to grow up to be responsible adults.

FIVE ARRESTED FOR STEALING RAIL METALS (Page 48)

7/08/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
FIVE men have been arrested by the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service for stealing rail metals belonging to the Ghana Railway Company Limited.
The five were spotted packing the metals into a Mitsubishi truck with registration number GR. 5415 H near Gate 33 in the Airport area at about 1am by a police patrol team.
The suspects are Iddrisu Amadu, Kwabena Anteaboa, Kwabena Asare, Baba Yakubu and Kwasi Ga. Two other accomplices, Eric Vivor and Bright Acheampong, both security men from the Magnum Security Force, who were on duty at the time, are at large.
According to the Public Relations Officer of the CID, Inspector J. B. Darkwa, on July 25, 2008 at about 2 am, the Panther 4 crew on night patrol duties, led by Inspector Patrick Tano, arrested the suspects while on their night patrol duties in the Airport area.
He said the suspects were seen coming out of a yard belonging to the Railway, where two security men from the Magnum Security Force, a private security company, were on guard duty.
Inspector Darkwa said when they were questioned about their action, they informed the patrol men that they were hired by one Issahaka, now at large, to collect some scraps he had purchased from the area to Tema.
He said further investigations revealed that the iron rails, numbering about 50, were the property of Ghana Railways Company, which had been kept in the yard for repair works on the rail lines.
He said the two security men, who had been performing night duties at Gate 33 for sometime now, bargained with Issahaka and sold the said metals to him on the afternoon of July 24, 2008.
The said Issahaka went to the place with a hired Mitsubishi truck with registration No. GR 5415 H driven by Iddrisu Amadu, and the other suspects to collect the items.
However, the suspects alleged that when they went into the yard, they could not lift the metals because they were long and very heavy.
They then abandoned the idea and decided to go home and as soon as they came out of the yard, they were arrested by the patrol men who handed them over to the police.
Upon interrogation, Vivor admitted that he and his colleague bargained with Issahaka to sell the rails for a price of GH¢35 each but they had not collected any money from him.
It was agreed that payment would be effected if the items were collected out of the yard.
The suspects are assisting police investigations while efforts are being made to apprehend Bright Acheampong and Issahaka.

THREE ARRESTED FOR ATTEMPTED MURDER (Page40)

6/08/2008
Story: Mary Mensah

The Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service has arrested three men for attempting to assassinate a businesswoman resident at the Trassaco Valley.
The three suspects are Eric Gyimah, 22, a student, David Amponsah, 27, a baker and Raymond Nii Odartey Lathbridge, 27, an artist.
The Public Relations Officer of the CID, Inspector J. B. Darkwa, said on June 6, 2008 the complainant received a phone call from Eric to the effect that some Nigerians were planning to assassinate her so she should beware, and the line went off.
She received another call on June 29, 2008 from Eric to inform her that she should give him GH¢7,000 to be given to the Nigerians for them not to carry out their attack, since the Nigerians had received GH¢4,000 from the person who contracted them to kill her.
Eric went ahead to tell the complainant that he would give her a compact disc containing a conversation of the assassination plot to kill her.
The complainant was said to have told Eric that she could only raise GH¢4000 which Eric readily accepted so she became suspicious and reported the matter to the police.
Eric called on July 9, 2008 and told the complainant to meet him at the University Farms at Ashalley Botwe after their previous arrangement to meet to deliver the CD to her in exchange for the GH¢4,000, had not come off.
On the day of the appointment, Eric involved the other two to monitor the movement of the complainant from her residence to the agreed location while he positioned himself closer to the complainants residence.
Unknown to the three suspects the police had also laid ambush and were monitoring their movements and were arrested as soon as they got to the University Farms.
Eric in his caution statement denied the offence and mentioned one Evans as the person who contacted him to tell the complainant those stories in order to receive GH¢4,000 from her.
Further investigations by the police revealed that it was Eric who hatched the plot and requested the assistance of the two with a promise to pay them GH¢300 each if the plan went through.
Eric, however, failed to lead the police to the said Evans for his arrest but stated that he met the said Evans on his way home from school and did not know where he lived.
The three suspects have been arraigned before an Accra Circuit Court and granted bail in the sum of GH¢17,000 each. The case had been adjourned to August 13, 2008.

POLICE SIEZED 44 STOLEN VEHICLES (Centre Spread Lead)

3/08/2008
Story: Mary Mensah
FORTY-FOUR vehicles, believed to have been stolen from foreign countries, have been impounded by the Ghana Police Service following a three-day exercise within the Accra-Tema metropolis.
The exercise, code-named ‘Operation SEMTA’, was organised by the INTERPOL Sub-Regional Bureau based in Abidjan, in conjunction with its General Secretariat in Lyon, France, to fight against the importation of stolen vehicles into four West African countries, namely Ghana, Togo, Benin and Nigeria.
DSP Faustina Andoh-Kwofie, head of INTERPOL Ghana, in a briefing to the press in Accra yesterday, said the general secretariat had developed the Automated Search Facility Stolen Vehicle (ASF-SWV) database to support the police in member countries in the fight against international vehicle theft and trafficking.
She said by the end of 2007, the database had more than 4.2 million records of reported stolen motor vehicles. She added that due to its global nature, the fight against organised crime called for partnership and effective collaboration among nations.
DSP Andoh-Kwofie said the vehicles were not only stolen for their own sake but sometimes they were trafficked to finance other crimes or used as bomb carriers in effecting other crimes.
She indicated that the Customs Excise and Preventive Service (CEPS), the Immigration Service, the Attorney-General’s Department and the Driver and Vehicle and Licensing Authority (DVLA) assisted the police during the operation and so far 38 of the seized vehicles had been confirmed as stolen from Canada, Belgium, Italy, Germany, and The Netherlands, among other places.
She said the remaining six had their chassis numbers tampered with and that made it difficult to detect whether they were stolen or not.
According to the commander, although the exercise was concentrated in the Accra and the Tema areas, it would be extended to the other regions.
She said statements had been taken from the owners of the seized vehicles and those who sold them to their current owners. She stated that after investigations the vehicles would be sent back to those from whom they were stolen if those owners were willing to bear the cost of shipment. If not they would be confiscated to the state.
She appealed to prospective car buyers to go to the CID headquarters in Accra and cross-check with the INTERPOL office before effecting any payment to avoid loss of money.

MAN ARRESTED FOR DEFRAUDING PROSPECTIVE TENANTS (Page 28)

7/8/2008
Story: Mary Mensah

A 43-year-old estate agent who allegedly duped a number of persons under the pretext of renting out an apartment to them has been arrested by the police in Accra.
The suspect, Martin Ackah, commonly known as Mr Mensah, was arrested by security officers at the offices of the Daily Graphic, where he went to place an advert, and was later handed over to the police.
According to the Public Relations Officer of the CID, Inspector J.B. Darkwa, two men, a legal practitioner and a medical officer, both resident in Accra, came to the headquarters and reported that they had been duped by an estate agent.
He said the two men indicated that in June, 2008, the suspect made a publication in the Daily Graphic that he had a three-bedroom flat at Adenta to rent out to prospective tenants.
The suspect put telephone numbers under the publication, so the two men quickly called and expressed interest in the apartment, after which they scheduled a meeting.
After the meeting, the suspect took them on separate occasions to the house for inspection and having been satisfied with this false representation, both victims parted with GH¢7,680 cash to the suspect.
The suspect, after collecting the money, promised to hand over the keys to them the following day, but failed to turn up and subsequently switched off his cell phone and went into hiding.
All efforts to locate him proved futile until a report was made to the police who alerted the Daily Graphic to be on the lookout for the suspect.
On July 25, 2008, the suspect again sent another man to the Daily Graphic to make another publication on a house at another location, and as soon as the man entered the office, he was arrested.
He later led the police to arrest the suspect and further investigations revealed that the suspect had no flat to rent out, and that the three-bedroom flat he showed to the complainants belonged to a group of syndicates who went round making such false publications in the newspapers in order to defraud unsuspecting members of society.
In his caution statement, the suspect admitted the offence.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

GHANA US COLLABORATE ON DRUG MENACE (Page14)

01/08/08
Story: Mary Mensah
Ghana and the United States of America have signed an agreement for the construction of a new drug interdiction facility at the Kotoka International Airport.
The $75,000 X-ray facility will help the Narcotics Control Board (NACOB) to detect drugs on individuals and it is expected to greatly enhance the processing of drug traffickers and other criminals at the airport.
The Charge d’Affairs at the US Embassy in Accra, Ms Sue Brown, signed the agreement for her government, while the Director of NACOB, Mr Ben Botwe, signed for the Ghana government.
According to Ms Brown, the facility, which formed part of the Airport Security Enhancement Project, was being funded by the US Africa Command.
She said the agreement was another step towards strengthening the already significant level of law enforcement co-operation between the US and Ghana, saying it would increase Ghana’s capacity to combat the growing problem of narcotics trafficking in the region.
She indicated that the goal was to create a facility within the airport to support counter narcotics activities and said when it became fully operational, it would significantly increase the ability of NACOB and its partners such as the UK- supported Project Westbridge to detect narcotics traffickers.
“We are confident that the development of this facility will support efforts at drug interdiction. We look forward to building on this additional measure to strengthen co-operation between our nations in the area of law enforcement,” she said.
The Charge d’Affairs said the US remained a committed partner of Ghana’s in facing the challenges ahead.
For his part, Mr Botwe said transporting people who were suspected to have swallowed drugs from the airport to the 37 Military Hospital for X-ray had not been easy, saying that the new facility would help detect the drugs at the airport and suspects would no longer be sent to the hospital.
He said the facility would greatly assist NACOB in its work and thanked the US government for its continuous support in terms of equipment and training.
He said a number officials from NACOB had undergone training programmes both in and out of the country, with the support of the US government, and announced that some staff members of the board would undergo similar training in Botswana in August this year.