Audio By Carbonatix
Three more soldiers and two policemen have been cited among the growing ranks of men in uniform who attempt to acquire wealth by means that offend the law.
The latest case to upset the Ghana Armed Forces and the Ghana Police Service is one of alleged extortion in which the three soldiers (including an ex-serviceman) and a civilian were arrested yesterday by officers at the Accra Regional Police Headquarters.
Two policemen and another civilian accomplice of theirs, however, managed to escape arrest.
One of the policemen on the run has been identified as Corporal Isaac Opare of the Accra Central Police Station, while the identity of the second has not been established.
Those in custody are William Taylor and Bismark Boateng, both active servicemen at the Air Force Base, Iddrisu Attoh, who claimed he had resigned from the Air Force, and Agbeko Manna, the civilian.
Briefing the Daily Graphic in Accra yesterday, the Public Relations Officer of the Accra Regional Police Command, Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Cyprian Zenge, said the suspects purportedly arrested and handcuffed two persons, Karim Abdulai and Nana Koranteng, a taxi driver, for allegedly smoking Indian hemp.
He said the security men allegedly informed the "suspects" that the Greater Accra Regional Police Commander, DCOP Rose Bio Atinga, had ordered their arrest for dealing in Indian hemp.
He said the security men, at that point, sought to bargain with the "suspects" for their release.
That, he explained, was after the security men had seized Nana Koranteng's mobile phones, money and car key.
He said when the security men drove towards the Accra Regional Police Command, they did not want to go into the yard with the '''suspects'', resulting in a heated argument, with Abdulai and Koranteng insisting that they be sent to the Regional Police Commander.
He said the security men attempted to abscond when some policemen approached their vehicle to find out what was happening. In the process, the soldiers and Agbeko were arrested.
To effect the operation, he said, one of the civilians had hired a trotro in the morning to pick the soldiers.
He said one of the soldiers was picked up around Kantamanto, from where they went to Dansoman to pick three other persons, including another soldier.
He said the gang went back to the Central Motor Traffic and Transport Unit to pick up another policeman and from there they went to Avenor, near the Kwame Nkrumah Circle, for the operation.
Source: Daily Graphic/Ghana
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana’s banking system nears full recovery after debt restructuring shock – IMF
34 minutes -
Banks back to full capital adequacy – IMF declares progress in Ghana sector clean-up
51 minutes -
IMF says BoG’s multi-billion cedi losses were part of economic recovery
1 hour -
The losses were necessary – IMF backs BoG’s costly economic rescue
2 hours -
People on the ground recognise the gains – IMF backs BoG strategy
2 hours -
Oil prices slide on hopes of US-Iran peace deal
2 hours -
Italy busts €300 million streaming piracy ring
2 hours -
Texas sues Meta, WhatsApp over encryption privacy claims
3 hours -
US appeals court revives $82 million of verdict against Ford in trade secrets case
3 hours -
Activision shareholders reach $250m settlement over Microsoft buyout
3 hours -
Google appeals US court ruling on search monopoly
3 hours -
QNET, Manchester City Host Grassroots Football Clinic in Ghana
3 hours -
StanChart CEO Bill Winters apologises for ‘upset caused’ by AI comments
3 hours -
Grok falls flat in Washington, undercutting SpaceX’s AI growth story
3 hours -
Bank of Ghana was not too aggressive – IMF defends tight policy measures
4 hours