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Ejura killings: Ghanaians’ voice should not be stifled with guns – CSOs Against Vigilantism

Eben Kwaku Fanuku

Eben Kwaku Fanuku

The Coalition of Civil Society Against Political Vigilantism has said the security agencies in Ghana must not be allowed the use guns to intimidate Ghanaians to become silence on issues of key national interest.

In the statement signed by its President, Mr. Eben Kwaku Fanuku on the killing of Ibrahim Mohammed aka Kaaka and two other at Ejura in the Ashanti Region of Ghana said “The voice of the ordinary Ghanaian should not and cannot be stifled with guns or any kind of weapon by any of the security forces or a joint team.”

“The Coalition condemns the use of the police and the military as a tool to commit such atrocities against ordinary Ghanaian citizens.” – He said

According to him, “Freedom of speech is a basic human right enshrined in the 1992 constitution of Ghana and no individual or group of individuals from the Executive, Legislature Judiciary, Police and Ghana Armed Forces should be allowed to subvert it.” adding that “From the brutalities in the Ayawaso West Wagon by elections, to the 7 innocent citizens that were killed in the 2020 general elections, the security of our fatherland is on the decline with every new incident.”

He stated that “The Ejura shootout would furthermore fester the growing mistrust of the Ghana Police, Armed Forces and the National Security by Ghanaians which can force people to take up their own security in their own hands by possibly taking up small arms and weapons in the name of protecting themselves.”

For him, “It is a basic and core mandate of the government of Ghana to protect the lives and properties of its citizens especially the ordinary Ghanaian. IT IS A basic RIGHT not a reserved PRIVILEGE.”

Ibrahim Mahamed a social activist and a member of the #FixTheCountry Campaign and Economic Fighters League was attacked in his home last week by unknown persons. He was rushed to the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital where he passed on whiles receiving treatment.

On his burial at Ejura, irate youth took to the street demanding justice but clashed with the joint Military-Police team causing the death other others with about nine injured.

Read the full statement:

Press Release

30th June 2021

CCSAPV CONDEMNS EJURA KILLINGS CALLS FOR PROSECUTION OF PERPETRATORS.

The Coalition of Civil Society Against Political Vigilantism, in no uncertain terms, condemns the gruesome murder of  Ibrahim Mohammed, a.k.a Kaaka, the opening of fire into a crowd of protestors, and subsequent killing of two protestors who were coming back from his burial on Tuesday, 29th June 2020.

Mohammed Ibrahim, popular known as Kaaka was a social media activist and one of the #FixTheCountry” foremost advocates was gruesomely attacked by two unknown assailants in the early hours of Saturday 26th June 2021 by striking his head with objects till he became unconscious. He later died on Monday 28th June 2021 at the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital. The murder of Kaaka and the subsequent opening of fire into a crowd of protestors in the aftermath of his burial is impunity that should be frowned on by all Ghanaians from the Presidency to the lowest-ranked son or daughter of this soil.

The manner in which the joint security team of the police and military conducted themselves was an abuse of power and office. It is important to note that under the circumstances Kaaka was murdered, it was just natural and inherent that the youth in Ejura will register their displeasure in various forms: on social media, picketing, and demonstrating.  In an attempt to quell or de-escalating the tension and unrest that was brewing amongst the indigenous, particularly the youth, the joint security have managed to escalate the situation through their professional negligence and the gross mishandling of the situation.

The Coalition condemns the use of the police and the military as a tool to commit such atrocities against ordinary Ghanaian citizens. The voice of the ordinary Ghanaian should not and cannot be stifled with guns or any kind of weapon by any of the security forces or a joint team. Freedom of speech is a basic human right enshrined in the 1992 constitution of Ghana and no individual or group of individuals from the Executive, Legislature Judiciary, Police, and Ghana Armed Forces should be allowed to subvert it. From the brutalities in the Ayawaso West Wagon by-elections, to the 7 innocent citizens that were killed in the 2020 general elections, the security of our fatherland is on the decline with every new incident. The Ejura shootout would furthermore fester the growing mistrust of the Ghana Police, Armed Forces, and the National Security by Ghanaians which can force people to take up their own security in their own hands by possibly taking up small arms and weapons in the name of protecting themselves. It is a basic and core mandate of the government of Ghana to protect the lives and properties of its citizens especially the ordinary Ghanaian. IT IS A basic RIGHT, not a reserved PRIVILEGE.

HOW THE CRIME AND INSECURITY SITUATION   ESCALATED TO ITS PRESENT STATE.

On Tuesday 15th June 2021, a bullion van carrying an unknown amount of cash was ambushed by armed robbers on motorbikes at Adedenkpo, a suburb of James Town in Accra. This heinous crime left in its wake the death of Lance Corporal Emmanuel Osei, the police officer escorting the van, Afua Badu, a vendor and a bystander, the injury of the bullion driver who missed death by a hair’s breadth and currently responding to medical treatment and two tellers of   Mon-tran, the company whose money was being carted, whom against all odds managed to escape the gruesome assault unhurt, albeit receiving treatment for the trauma and shell shock in a hospital.

This is the umpteenth attack on a bullion van (which is nothing but a woefully ineffective makeshift bullion van at best) by armed robbers or unknown gunmen in a space of a year; the last one was on 2nd   March   2021 when a bullion van belonging to Cal Bank was robbed in broad daylight in Accra. I can almost confidently opine that robbing bullion vans has become a new specialty and an untapped oil field for hardened criminals in Accra. Comme d’habitude, people have started blaming Sasabonsam, the nation’s perennial villain and nemesis for our negligence and incompetence. Maybe this time, we have found the guilty parties to apportion the blame of “you should have seen this coming, you should have read in the signs” in a typical Ghanaian post mortem analytic fashion.

In a related development, the Ghana Police Service who have once again, needlessly lost a young, bright, and promising member, has reacted to the issue as the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) has directed the Director-General, Criminal Investigation Department to take over investigations into circumstances leading to the killing of the aforementioned police officer and the vendor bystander during the 15th June bullion van attack. A press release signed by the Director of Public Affairs of the Ghana Police Service, Superintendent of Police (SP), Shiela Abayie- Buckman stated that crime scene experts have visited the scene and are going through the necessary procedures to aid in the investigation. The statement also stated that the IGP, James Oppong- Boanuh has reminded the Association of Bankers to provide well-fortified armored bullion vans for carting currencies by the end of June 2021 as earlier agreed with the Ghana Police Service. Isn’t this sermon by the IGP so old, over-preached, and overhead by the Association of Bankers already in the wake of the too many bullion van attacks in recent history? Does Jonah the Prophet need to resurrect and forewarn the Bank of Ghana and the Association of Bankers that they would always put their workers, the police, and the taxpayer’s hard-earned cash in harm’s way if they continue carting their monies in wack or makeshift bullion vans (which at their very best, are no bullion vans at all) with schoolboy police security escorts?

Does the Ghana Police Service, the bona fide law enforcement agency need Napoleon Bonaparte’s will to enforce a very basic, simple, sensible, logical, and compulsory arrangement or apparatus that would guarantee the safety of the precious lives of their members and that of the general public by extension? Ponder over the following seemingly rhetorical questions. Who watches the police as they watch the bullion van? Who protects the policeman or policewoman that protects the “make shift bullion vans”? As rhetorical as they may seem, the answer is actually, nobody! Imagine there was an army of fully armed police personnel and an armoured vehicle tracking the makeshift bullion van behind, would the outcome be the same as nemesis struck? Now that’s rhetorical!

What we must know is that the security situation in Ghana did not denigrate to its doldrums by happenstance, neither did it happen just overnight, it has been in a downward trajectory since January and has been a wave of crime after crime after crime. It has been telling a story to the security set up who perhaps have n that they have not been  following with keen interest. It had its handwriting scampered all over the place, we should have seen it coming, we should have read the signs.

On 4th February 2021, an ambulance carrying a pregnant woman in labour from the Akuse Government Hospital to the Koforidua Regional Hospital was shot by a group of eight armed robbers at Aseseso near Adukrom around 1;30am when they claimed to have mistaken the ambulance’s siren for a police siren. The ambulance’s driver was badly injured in the process as the robbers went ahead to rob all the occupants of the vehicle. A police team that rushed to the scene later conveyed the injured driver and pregnant woman to the Tetteh Quarshie Memorial Hospital and the pregnant woman to the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital from thence. The ambulance driver has since died.

            THE WAY FORWARD

LIFE IS A FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN RIGHT ENSHRINED UNTO US BY NATURE AND WE SHOULD DO EVERYTHING IN OUR JURISDICTION TO PROTECT OUR OWN GHANAIAN LIVES AND PROPERTY. NO ONE CAN PROTECT THE GHANAIAN BETTER THAN THE GHANAIAN.A STITCH IN TIME, SAVES NINE. IT IS BETTER TO BE SAFE THAN TO BE SORRY. IT WOULD BE BETTER TO ERR ON THE SIDE OF CAUTION THAN TO FEIGN PERFECTION. IT IS NOW OR NEVER!!!.

 

Signed

EBEN KWAKU FANUKU

President

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