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Probe Further On Missing Cocaine Issue – A Group Urges Gov’t

President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo

[dropcap]A [/dropcap]research think thank, Strategic Thinkers Network (STRANEK) is charging the security agencies to probe further on Tema Port alleged missing cocaine case.

According to the group, based on previous accounts on famous cocaine cases, there is the need to probe further despite CEPS’s refusion of the allegations.

Read the detail of the statement below: 

[ads1]On Friday April 28, 2017, the Finder Newspaper reported that 500kg of cocaine (10 bags each weighing 50kg) with an estimated street value of US$30 million disappeared from the Tema Port under mysterious circumstances.

It has further been reported that the Narcotics Control Board (NARCOB) had earlier been alerted through the Joint Port Control Unit (JPCU) at the Tema Port, of a ship suspected to be carrying narcotic drugs and heading into Ghanaian waters.

The alert, which was received from the United Nations Office on Drugs (UNODC) and the Surinamese authorities, led to the tracking of the drugs and the ship by the UK’s Operation West Bridge and the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA).

The ship arrived at the Tema Port in December 2016 but by February 23, 2017, the cocaine had mysteriously disappeared. According to the reports:

The Customs Excise & Preventive Services (CEPS) Sector Commander at the Tema Port, Confidence Nyadzi, in an interview denied that there was cocaine which had gone missing. Mr. Nyadzi claimed that no such thing as cocaine had been imported into the country through the Tema Port and that both the Bureau of National Investigations (BNI) and NACOB had reached the same conclusion after investigation.  In the same interview, however, he, paradoxically, indicated that investigations into the matter had not been concluded.

We, at the Strategic Thinkers Network (STRANEK), are appealing to President Akuffo Addo to ensure that this cocaine saga is not swept under the carpet. NACOB, JPCU, Bureau of National Investigations (BNI), National Security and other relevant authorities must be tasked by Government to probe deeper to unravel the truth.

This matter of the missing US$30 million worth of cocaine should not be relegated to the category of unsolved drug crimes like the 2006 MV Benjamin Saga when Sherif Asem Darkeh is supposed to have carted away 77 parcels of cocaine from a vessel docked at Kpone/Tema, or the 2007 case when cocaine in the custody of the police turned into powered cassava (kokonte).

Urgent efforts must be made to get to the bottom of this matter for the good of the nation.  It is important that a signal is sent to the whole world that Ghana will never again revert to being described as a ‘drug transit point’.

We assure the nation that we will not rest until this matter is brought to a logical conclusion. We are all involved in building our motherland Ghana.

Signed

Nii Tettey Tetteh

Executive Director

Charles Kwadade

Deputy Executive Director

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