29 April 2015

Afriyie-Ankrah Attacks Kwesi Yankah Over Corruption Claims

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Elvis Afriyie-Ankrah

Former Youth and Sports Minister Elvis Afriyie-Ankrah has broken his “self-imposed silence” to reply the president of the Central University College Prof. Kwesi Yankah over claims that the Presidency of Ghana has become safe haven for corruption.

“The Presidency is perceived to have become a comfortable refuge for officials suspected to have been involved in corruption and are under investigation,” Yankah said at an IEA event Tuesday.

Ankrah was reassigned to the Presidency as a Minister of State after leading the Black Stars to the 2014 World Cup which ended in a debacle amidst allegations of fishy deals.

According to him, the academician got it all wrong.

“Ordinarily, I would have continued in my self-imposed silence and refuse to respond to the rather erroneous comments made by the academician and President of the Central University College, Prof. Yankah who happened to be the Dean of Students at the University of Ghana at the time I entered the premiere university. In my moments of silence for the past nine (9) months, I have personally suffered abuse, naked insults and misrepresentations from all kinds of pundits, faceless and identifiable social media activists and commentator who have fed the public with nothing but deliberate distorted facts and outright falsehood. I did not expect a respected keynote speaker at an anti-corruption conference to also liaise his speech with innuendos and anecdotes without any factual basis,” he said in a statement to defend his tenure as a sports minister.

Below is the full statement:

The Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA-Ghana) invited me to participate in a CORRUPTION CONFERENCE under the theme “purging the nation of corruption: demanding accountability from public institutions” which was held on Tuesday, 28th April, 2015. The conference was expected to elicit proposals for strengthening public institutions to give them teeth. In addition to reviewing the institutions, it sought to make proposals for demanding accountability from heads of these institutions. Rather unfortunately, I could not be physically present at this conference due to other official assignments; I however sent a representative to make my input available to the IEA. It was at this gathering of stakeholders that Prof. Kwesi Yankah delivered a keynote address which in part was subsequently reported by Joy Fm under the heading “Presidency a Safe Haven for Corruption – Prof. Kwesi Yankah.

Ordinarily, I would have continued in my self-imposed silence and refuse to respond to the rather erroneous comments made by the academician and President of the Central University College, Prof. Yankah who happened to be the Dean of Students at the University of Ghana at the time I entered the premiere university. In my moments of silence for the past nine (9) months, I have personally suffered abuse, naked insults and misrepresentations from all kinds of pundits, faceless and identifiable social media activists and commentator who have fed the public with nothing but deliberate distorted facts and outright falsehood. I did not expect a respected keynote speaker at an anti-corruption conference to also liaise his speech with innuendos and anecdotes without any factual basis.

POST BRAZIL WORLD CUP 
After the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, I purposely decided to remain silent for very good reasons and allow the Presidential Commission to unearth the truth about the numerous but mostly ludicrous allegations that heralded the tournament. Silence they say is golden, and I steadfastly held on to that principle not to publicly speak about the events in Brazil, because despite my genuine intentions, efforts and energy that was invested in the preparations to the tournament, which saw the Black Stars walloping their Egyptian counterparts by 6 goals to 1 in Kumasi, and our subsequent qualification coupled with the high expectations of the vibrant football lovers of the country, Ghana was disappointed in the World Cup. Ghanaians were justified in displaying the palpable anger which followed our abysmal performance. I later apologized and accepted responsibility for the inability of the team to progress beyond the first round.

However, accepting responsibility for the team’s poor showing does not, and can never mean that I was culpable of any malfeasance. I availed myself before the Justice Senyo Dzamefe Commission and rendered a blatantly truthful account of my stewardship in both the public and in camera hearings. It has been my hope that the Commission’s report will contain nothing less than the exposition of the facts for the benefit of the public who were obviously mislead by the overabundance of fabricated and fictional stories. It is against this background that Prof. Kwesi Yankah’s statement provoked the breaking of my silence.

PROF. KWESI YANKAH MISFIRED 
First of all, there is no doubt that Prof. Kwesi Yankah is an “eminent educationist” with valuable experience. I remember vividly how his articles which were published inThe Mirror, were a source of constant nourishment to the aptitude of many university students. Without any effort, I can easily overlook comments by political detractors, over sensational media practioners and sentimental social commentators who twist and embellish the events surrounding the Brazil World Cup saga. On the contrary, when an astute Professor and President of an institution of higher learning speaks at such a conference with both local and international distinguished participants and makes remarks without recourse to the relevant facts, but feeds into the usual rumour mongering and speculative anecdotes – then there is the need to set the records straight unapologetically! Again, under normal circumstances, I will hesitate to respond to such a towering academic figure whose experience in the lecture hall far exceeds mine. Conversely, that is the more reason why he has a greater responsibility to speak to the bare facts and not the dramatic narratives that has become the norm rather than the exception.

Clearly, Prof. Kwesi Yankah took refuge in inexactitudes when he stated in part that “when appointees are cited for embezzlement and corruption, no machinery is set in motion for investigation, prosecution or indictment” and further lamented with apparent reference to me, that “the Presidency is perceived to have become a comfortable refuge for officials suspected to have been involved in corruption and are under investigation” He argues further that there is “shelving in the Presidency of several reports on probes and investigations in which public appointees have been fingered for corruption, embezzlement and procurement deals.”

SETTING THE RECORDS STRAIGHT WITH VERIFIABLE FACTS 
Now, let me put these misleading comments into proper perspective:

1. I have NEVER and DID NOT engage in any act of embezzlement or misappropriation of public funds in and outside the Brazil World Cup saga. I rendered full accounts of my stewardship to the relevant authorities with respect to both the funds allocated to the team by government and the funds which I together with my team solicited through an innovative corporate sponsorship drive.

2. For the first time in the history of Ghana’s preparation for the World Cup, there was no seed money due to budgetary constraints. I, together with the organizers, devised creative means to raise more than Four and Half Million Ghana Cedis (GHC 4,500,000) to send supporters to Brazil.

3. All the accounts I presented to the World Cup Presidential Commission were subjected to a FORENSIC AUDIT by the internationally acclaimed audit firm, Ernst & Young and I am absolutely confident that I never did anything untoward.

4. As a matter of fact, I presented evidence to show and I still insist that out of the USD $ 9,417,024.87 which I received from government for the World Cup expenses of the Black Stars, I left a whopping Four Million, Four Hundred and Forty-Four Thousand, Fifty Nine Dollars and Fifty Nine Cents (USD $ 4,444,053.59) in the Ministry’s account as at the time I exited. There is no contrary claim to this fact.

5. Let me put on record that the cash that was flown from Ghana to Brazil (appearance fee) was part of the approved budget estimates. That single unfortunate incident was needlessly triggered by player agitations and entrenched insistence of cash payment before the next match as opposed to the original plan of electronic payments. Besides, it is impossible for me to unilaterally move money from the Bank of Ghana, load it onto an aircraft, fly into Brazil and get all the necessary clearance. Every decision taken in that matter was after due consultations with relevant state authorities.

6. As the Youth and Sports Minister, I personally set up a committee, under the directive and full backing of H.E. President John Mahama to investigate the numerous allegations and suspicion of wrong doing in the then GYEEDA with a lot of political will. Today, there are officials standing trial and monies being refunded to the State and wasteful contracts abrogated.

7. Before serving in the Youth and Sports Ministry, I was a Deputy Minister for four (4) continuous years and not a single act or suspicion of corruption was ever raised about my conduct.

It goes without saying that reassignments and reshuffling of Ministers of State is the prerogative of the President of the Republic. To the extent that I am not culpable in any malfeasance, I cannot be said to be enjoying some “comfortable refuge” at the Presidency. Such unmeasured remarks rather undermine government efforts of dealing with corruption.

CONCLUSION:

One would have thought that a “distinguished Professor” such as Kwesi Yankah, will be more meticulous in his research before speaking at such an august gathering. Well, in the absence of a well-researched speech, a number of questions beg for answers:

• Is Professor Yankah aware of the FORENSIC AUDITS of the accounts I presented? 
• Is he aware that I left almost half of the funds allocated for the World Cup in the Ministry’s account? 
• Is he aware that we had to work so hard to raise funds from Corporate Ghana to send supporters’ to Brazil? 
• Does Prof. Yankah know that as the sector Minister, with the full support of the President, I stood my grounds and ensured that the GYEEDA investigations were conducted to their logical conclusions?

It is very possible that Prof. Kwesi Yankah may be oblivious to all these FACTS. If that is the case, then I am afraid he did me a lot of injustice. Is it also possible that Prof. Yankah was fully aware of all these developments yet he rather chose to play to the gallery with such comments? With all due respect and without any reservations, there is every indication that Prof. Yankah erred in his remarks directed at me. I take his comments in my stride just like the many indiscreet commentaries that have emanated from many other people.

It is extremely regrettable and disappointing that combating corruption has been unfairly reduced to the heavy use of conjecture without any genuine effort to recognize the efforts of government officials. It is even more worrying to find respectable people in academia such as Prof. Kwesi Yankah who have whether by design or coincidence, fallen to this rather obstructive terrain. This kind of conduct and attitude where every politician is labelled as corrupt and it is further embellished by some anti-graft campaigners so it sticks for a desired effect is counterproductive and a disincentive to fighting corruption.

The fight against corruption is a collective goal which demands partnership between government and civil society groups and not outright condemnation. We owe a duty to our nation and generations unborn to ruthlessly weed out corruption. I strongly believe we are more than capable of winning this war provided we can focus and consolidate the gains we have made while discounting the unnecessary suspicion of every government official or politician as being corrupt.

HON. ELVIS AFRIYIE-ANKRAH 
(Minister of State at the Presidency)


Via: -Daily Guide  

‘Wear Red On May Day’… OccupyGhana Charges On Citizens

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Pressure group Occupy Ghana wants all Ghanaians to wear any red attire on Friday may 1st 2015, to protest the worsening economic conditions in the country. “

On May day Friday the 1st Organised Labour is calling on all Ghanaians especially workers to wear a touch of red in solidarity with all hardworking Ghanaians workers as the protest for better living and economic condition.

We ask you to wear red if you believe the government must reduce fuel prices now.Wear red if you believe the government must fix dumsor now, wear red if you believe our pension funds mut be better managed.

Wear red if you believe the Ghanaian workers deserves better,” a leading member of the pressure group Sydney Casley Hayford said.

Speaking to the media in Accra, a leading member of the pressure group Sydney Casely Hayford stated that the erratic power supply, depreciation of the cedi, rising interest rates and a plethora of issues that confront the worker in the country has made life unbearable for them.

According to him “almost every formal and informal work from farmers, dressmakers, drivers, tuck pushers, hawkers, nurses, teachers and all white collar workers have had to battle with the dire economic conditions and live a decent life.”

He insisted the call is to send a strong signal to government that the Ghanaian worker is suffering hence an urgent need for the Mahama led administration to put in place prudent measures to ameliorate the situation The group has championed the fight against corruption for sometime now.

They have initiated a series of demonstrations to protest what they have describe as unfavourable policies introduced by government.

 


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Do we Have Honest Men In Ghana? – Palmer-Buckle wonders

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Archbishop Gabriel Charles Palmer-Buckle

Archbishop Gabriel Charles Palmer-Buckle is wondering if Ghana still has “honest men” looking at the festering corruption in the country.

The Metropolitan Archbishop of Accra of the Catholic Church is alarmed by the spate of corruption in every aspect of society and feels every hand must be on deck to stamp out the menace.

“Kudos to IEA and to all the Civil Society Organizations that have kept corruption on the front burning of our country’s political discourse and it must be kept at the front burning and not the back burning,” Palmer-Buckle said at an IEA programme on corruption in Accra.

“Let’s keep it on our agenda every time… but at some points I am tempted to look for an honest man in Ghana; do we have honest men in Ghana?”

He added: “In fighting against corruption, we cannot ignore the three pillars. The National Anti-Corruption Action Plan has come up with quite an interesting document and fantastic blueprint but it has to be implemented by honest men; suggestions have come up from various sectors and these suggestions have to be implemented by honest men….most probably the search for honest men still continues.”

Credit: Starrfmonline.com


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Vet CHRAJ appointees, others; Short, Kan-Dapaah advocate

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Mr Justice Emile Short

The current system by which the President solely appoints heads of investigative and accountability institutions denies those appointees the independence to hold government officials accountable for their actions, two former public officials have observed.

A former Commissioner of the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), Mr Justice Emile Short, and a former Chairman of the Public Accounts Committee of Parliament, Mr Albert Kan-Dapaah, who criticised the arrangement, said appointments to those positions should be made through a system of vetting to get independent, fair-minded and competent professionals to man those institutions.

They said such appointees would be in a better position to hold the President and other government officials accountable.

Mr Justice Short and Mr Kan-Dapaah made the point in separate presentations at a corruption conference organised by the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) in Accra yesterday.

The conference, held on the theme: “Purging the Nation of Corruption: Demanding Accountability from Public Institutions”, was attended by Ministers of State, Members of Parliament, political, religious and traditional leaders and heads of civil society organisations.

Emile Short

Speaking on the topic: “Empowering Ghana’s Anti-Corruption Institutions in the Fight Against Corruption”, Mr Justice Short said there was the need to put in place an appointment process that was transparent and not unduly influenced by political considerations.

“One that will ensure that heads and top leadership of these independent constitutional bodies are competent, independent-minded, have integrity and will not buckle under any undue pressure from any quarter,” he said.

The former CHRAJ Commissioner said the present procedure by which the President appointed members of bodies such as CHRAJ, the Electoral Commission (EC) and the Auditor General, among others, in consultation with the Council of State, had come under close scrutiny in recent times.

He said the Constitutional Review Commission (CRC) recommended that the chairman, deputy chairmen and other members of the EC, the chairman and members of the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE), the Commissioner of CHRAJ and the Auditor General be appointed by the President, in consultation with the Council of State and with the prior approval of Parliament.

He said while the recommendation was an improvement on the present appointment process, “it does not, in my humble view and in the view of many analysts, go far enough”.

Mr Justice Short said he sided with the recommendation from the IEA public consultation that the President should appoint the heads of those institutions in consultation with the Council of State and with the prior approval of two-thirds majority of Parliament.

Alternatively, he said, a duly constituted independent and bi-partisan committee should advertise the vacant position, vet the applicants, draw up a shortlist and submit same to the President for appointment.

Mr Justice Short said one aspect of the three-pronged approach to the fight against corruption was effective investigation and prosecution.

“Corruption will flourish when persons implicated in the misconduct are not prosecuted and when found guilty imprisoned. The primary responsibility for prosecuting rests on the Attorney-General,” he said.

The former CHRAJ Commissioner said the fusion of the Office of the Attorney-General (A-G) and that of the Minister of Justice “theoretically places the Attorney-General in a difficult position when he or she has to prosecute public officials of the sitting government”.

He said the CRC had recommended the de-coupling of the A-G’s Office from that of the Ministry of Justice, which was accepted by the government.

However, he said, there was the need for the appointment of the independent public prosecutor be made in a transparent manner and with the involvement of Parliament and civil society.

Mr Justice Short said the Executive Director of the Economic and Organised Crimes Office (EOCO) was appointed by the President, noting that that limitation had the potential of undermining the ability and willingness of EOCO “to investigate and prosecute high-ranking members of the incumbent government”.

Kan-Dapaah

The former Chairman of the PAC, Mr Kan-Dapaah, who spoke on: “The Role of Parliament Against Corruption”, said the challenge concerned the appointment of the Speaker of Parliament, the Deputy Speakers, Majority leaders and other leaders of Parliament by the President.

As a result, he said, Parliament was not able to hold the Executive accountable for its actions.

He said, for instance, that there was unwillingness on the part of leaders of Parliament to lay the report of the PAC before Parliament, especially when the issues were not favourable to the government.

Mr Kan-Dapaah said the current system by which the power of appointing and sacking the Auditor-General rested with the President made it difficult for the Auditor-General to conduct independent audit of government officials.

He, therefore, suggested an appointment method that would attach legal immunity to the office of the Auditor-General.

Prof Yankah

The President of the Central University College, Prof Kwesi Yankah, took on successive government officials, MPs and the Judiciary for condoning acts of corruption in one way or another.

He, therefore, challenged leaders to lead the crusade against corruption by word and by deed.

Prof Yankah said the tendency where government appointees embroiled in corruption scandals were later appointed to work elsewhere did not speak well of the government.

But reacting to the allegations, the Presidential Advisor on Corruption, Mr Daniel Batidam, said “we all have to be careful about how the commitment to fighting corruption must be demonstrated.”

“I would like to stay with the principles of our constitutions that require us to know that people are innocent until proven guilty.”

On the reassignment on persons tainted with allegations being reassigned elsewhere, he said “the perception is that people should not be appointed when allegations are hanging. It is something that is discretional.

“The President has the prerogative to go ahead of the due process and treat the person as if he was guilty or to allow that case to reach its logical conclusion, he told the Joy FM in Accra.

In a speech read on his behalf, the National Chief Imam, Sheikh Osmanu Nuhu Sharubutu, said corruption was a canker that slowed down economic and social growth and, therefore, called for a concerted effort to fight it.

The Executive Director of the IEA, Mrs Jean Mensa, said the conference would impose accountability demands on heads of government institutions to ensure that they delivered on their mandate without fear or favour.

Credit: Graphic.com.gh


Via: -Daily Guide  

Govt Blows Billions

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President John Mahama

The government hugely exceeded its stipulated expenditure in 2012 – election year – with almost all ministries and departments spending beyond their budgets by more than 300 percent.

The Ministry of Energy for instance, was allocated GH¢270 million but ended up spending GH¢746 million.

The Ministry of Youth and Sports also spent a whooping GH¢253 million instead of the budgeted GH¢46 million while Government Machinery blew GH¢158 million outside its budget of GH¢94.7 million.

The Ministry for Chieftaincy Affairs, which was alleged to have procured luxury four-wheel vehicles for some prominent chiefs in the run-up to the elections, overspent its budget by 450 percent.

These came to light when the Public Accounts Committee of Parliament (PAC) sat yesterday to scrutinize the Auditor-General’s report on the public accounts of Ghana, – the Consolidated Fund.

When the Controller and Accountant-General, Grace Adzroe, was queried by the committee members as to why she allowed for such unrestrained expenditures, she explained that because it was an election year expenses were over-bloated, making it difficult for the department to give details for monies spent by government

Worried committee members, led by the chairman, Kwaku Agyeman-Manu, asked the Controller and Accountant-General to appear before the committee latest by Monday, to provide explanations as to why almost all the ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) hugely overspent their budget in 2012.

Apart from checking the over-spending by institutions including the Electoral Commission and the National Commission for Civic Education, the Controller and Accountant-General also failed to pay all statutory funds on time in 2012, contrary to the Financial Administrative Act.

Based on the 2013 Auditor-General’s report, it was also revealed that the transfer of Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) contributions amounting to GH¢826 million, were not done while the government paid GH¢41.8 commitment fee even after the expiry of the disbursement period.

The government was said to have failed to pay GH¢15.2 million into the Consolidated Fund from proceeds of divestiture.

There was also lack of information on surpluses transferred into the Consolidated Fund by the Bank of Ghana and the National Lottery Authority.

There was an amount of GH¢513,000 that was charged on the Consolidated Fund instead of the accounts of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC), which the Deputy Minister of Finance, Cassiel Ato Forson, described as ‘human error.’

By Thomas Fosu Jnr


Via: -Daily Guide  

Only “uneducated minds” will vote NDC in 2016 – Napo

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Dr Mathew Opoku Prempeh

The Member of Parliament for Manhyia in the Ashanti region Mathew Opoku Prempeh has stated that “only uneducated minds” will vote for the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) in the upcoming 2016 elections.

According to him, any serious minded Ghanaian should be looking for an alternative party to replace the “non-performing” Mahama administration come the general elections.

“It is only an uneducated mind that will continue to vote for the NDC government, a government bereft of ideas, a government bereft of policy and a government bereft of credibility.

“We need a government that will prosper Ghana and prosper Ghanaians. This power situation we find ourselves in today is avoidable.

“We need not be in this situation but for a bad government, this situation has been uncalled for but for a visionless government.

“We need a government that will think about all Ghanaians and not just NDC,” the medical doctor told the media in Kumasi Wednesday after he submitted his nomination forms for his re-election.

He also advised Ghanaians to be mindful of who they vote for during national elections since a wrong choice of candidate will have dire consequences for the entire nation.

Source: Starrfmonline.com


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Beware Of Human Traffickers  

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A visit to the Elmina castle some years back and personally listening to how our forefathers were sold in exchange for insignificant goods such as textiles, gunpowder and horses brought so much sorrow to final year students of the Ghana Institute of Journalism (GIJ) who had gone on excursion to the place.

As we anxiously followed the tourist guide, four of us could not hold back our tears as we were told the Castle served as the depot for slaves who were captured and brought in by chiefs and kings, held captive till they finally exited through the Castle’s infamous “door of no return” to be transported and resold in other colonies. As my heart beat faster, I said to myself, never should we allow this to happen again.

Today we might not be sold to foreigners through that small outlet as was the case in the colonial days, but this time in deceitful and credulous forms. What I call modern-day slavery or trafficking in persons has become lucrative and one of the fastest growing criminal businesses in the world.It constantly changes in order to defeat efforts by law enforcement agencies to combat it.Ghana in recent times has become a source, transit and destination of human trafficking.

kidsPerpetrators now recruit people in more sophisticated ways, either through churches, colleges, universities, electronic and print media only to gain the consent of potential victims to unknown destinations.  Recent reports indicate that millions of people are involved in this type of crime with women and children mostly affected.

In Ghana the Human Trafficking Act (Act 694) defines human trafficking as “the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring, trading or receipt of persons for the purpose of exploitation WITHIN and ACCROSS national borders; through the use of threats, force or other forms of coercion, abduction, fraud, deception, the abuse of power or exploitation of vulnerability.”

There is a misconception that human trafficking is foreign-born and victims of this crime are transported across the shores or borders of the country. But this is not so. The Act stresses on both within and across. Persons, especially children and young girls, often fall prey to internal trafficking. The movement of internally trafficked children is either from rural to urban areas or from one rural area to another, mostly farming to fishing and mining communities.

Trafficking of children to the urban areas has existed for decades and continues to be a worrying trend. Most of us sometimes consciously or unconsciously contribute immensely to its growth. This is because we are supplied with children as domestic workers or house helps without any efforts to find out the roots of these children.They are sometimes subjected to conditions of forced labour, domestic servitude, street hawking, baby attendants, ect.  In most instances, as vulnerable as they may be, young girls are subjected to commercial sexual exploitation against their will.

At times it is customarily acceptable for a child to be placed with relatives who are resident in the big cities to afford the child better opportunities of development. Even though this may be a laudable idea, it is often steeped in abuse; the children are reduced to modern slaves.  The conditions presented to children are quite harmful and detrimental to their health, safety and the developmental stages.

Moreover, greedy employers hurriedly take advantage of the vulnerability of children in the cities and illegally employ them since they are easy to exploit, less in cost, and easy to control.

With the issue of rural to rural form of trafficking, children  whose parents feel they are threatened by extreme economic hardship and incapable of meeting the basic needs, education and health care of their children, are tempted and quick to push their children to even strangers who may try to offer any kind of assistance. Consent of parents is won through deception and other fraudulent means. Sometimes a few Cedis are exchanged for these vulnerable children and taken far away where tracing their place of origin becomes a problem.  What word could be more appropriate for this kind of oddity than modern-day slavery?

The Human Trafficking Act, (Act 694) strongly prohibits the act of trafficking and when children are involved, the consent of the child, parents or guardian cannot be used as a defence in prosecution. Also the intermediary, the user or anyone who participates in any aspect of the trafficking is culpable.

How many of us are infringing the law by using trafficked victims as house helps? This same Act forbids a person from using a trafficked person. This enjoins us to query the source and the background of children who are brought to us as domestic workers. You commit an offence and liable on summary conviction to a term of imprisonment of not less than five years if you harbour or use a trafficked person.

Trafficking in persons has no age limit and it targets people of all fields, especially those who believe their destiny to succeed only lies in the urban areas or abroad. Victims between the ages of 7 and 45 years are trafficked on daily bases both within and across our national boundaries.

Trafficking across the national borders has become quite alarming due to its global effects and risk on health, organized crime, and other wide-reaching social impact. Victims of trafficking are generally recruited throughdeception, threat, force or other forms of coercion, abduction, fraud, the abuse of power or position of vulnerability.

An interview with three victims who had just returned from overseas showed how dangerous the situation could be. Three ladies between the ages of 21 and 24 years were workers of a popular restaurant in Ghana. They were approached by another colleague for “a better job opportunity” in one of the Asian counties as shop attendants.  To them, since the information was coming from a trusted colleague, there was no need to cross-check it. All travelling documents were processed within a month and they left the shores of the country. According to them, their passports and other travelling documents were seized from them the moment they arrived in the destination country. The three were held hostage in a building under the guard of two strong men. To their surprise, there was no shop attendant job for them apart from choosing between commercial sex trade, strip dancing and singing at clubs and other nude-entertaining functions. They suffered serious physical abuses and starvation owing to their determination not to accept the offers presented to them. For how long were they going to be obstinate? Monies made from this sexual exploitation were collected by their traffickers because they needed to pay for their (sex traders’) documentation and travelling charges. Fortunately, they had to flee when the slightest loophole presented itself and reported themselves at a police station for assistance. It was through the support and instrumentality of the police that they found themselves back in Ghana to tell their story

Very often, victims of trafficking continue with the work they have been recruited to do because any attempt to draw the attention of the authorities will cause their deportation. Even if they have a chance to report, they sometimes refuse because they have been brainwashed by the traffickers that illegal immigrants get no help.  This is false. Trafficking is a crime and irrespective of their immigration status, most countries are willing to help the victims and get them out of the situation.

Lately, there has been a strong commitment locally and internationally from various stakeholders, law enforcers, through sensitization programmes and strategic measures, to create the needed awareness to address the issue of human trafficking. The Anti-Human Trafficking Unit of the Ghana Police Service is no exception. 1n 2013 alone, about 75 trafficked persons were rescued and supported to trace back their families in Ghana.

As devastating as it may be, the crime keeps evolving rapidly and requires extra alertness from everyone to fight the menace. For this reason, Section 6 of the Human Trafficking Act makes it mandatory for any person with information on trafficking or victims of trafficking to inform the police. Withholding information on trafficking also amounts to an offence.

The Director of the Anti-Human Trafficking Unit of the Ghana Police Service, Supt. Patience Quaye, advises people, especially young women, to be extra careful in accepting job offers which seem too good to be true. Like the story of the three ladies, this is the most common bait sex traffickers use. They usually promise their potential victims job in a foreign country with attractive rewards, lure and send them to these countries only to find out that there are no jobs waiting for them, apart from prostitution.

Another trick used to recruit people is through promise of love. Traffickers trap their potential victims to get them emotionally involved and immediately request their presence in their countries. It is always advisable to take enough time to know people who express interests in you, especially on the internet.  If someone’s behaviour is suspicious and over-eager for you, extra care must be taken – articularly, requesting to fund all travelling expenses when you barely know each other. Instead, why not ask him to visit you? It may be safer in your own country since you are more familiar with your country and can easily call for help when the need arises.

Measures to curb human trafficking are ongoing both internally and internationally, yet millions of people remain trapped in severe conditions around the world. Support the cause with information and resource to mitigate, fight or eliminate human trafficking in your own small way.

For Any Information on Crime and Police Assistance call National Crimefighters Numbers 0302 773695, 0302 773906, MTN and VODAFONE Toll-free 18555 191(Vodafone/Expresso/Airtel & TiGO). 

 Email: effia2014@yahoo.com

 BY ASP Effia Tenge          

 


Via: -Daily Guide