Audio By Carbonatix
The Member of Parliament for Ningo Prampram, Samuel George has likened the abode of police personnel in the country to hen coops.
“The police should be reminded that if this country is fixed, the state in which many police live in our police barracks which is akin to chickens in a hen coop will be fixed,” he told JoyNews on Friday.
His statement comes as a response to the arrest of #FixTheCountry campaigners who supposedly gathered unlawfully at the High Court hearing the case of whether the group can hit the streets to protest or not. The 12 including actress Efia Odo were later granted self-recognizance bail.
The Ningo Prampram legislator dismissed claims of unlawful gathering stating that having “10 to 15 people holding placards and simply not obstructing traffic, not being a nuisance to the public, not disturbing the public peace, but simply asking for the country to be fixed, I struggle to see the rationale behind and arrest.”
According to Sam George, the police rather than preventing a group of Ghanaians from holding the government accountable should support the good course to have the recent challenges facing police escorts fixed.
"The Police should be reminded that in fixing the country, their colleagues who escort bullion vans would be given proper protection," he said.
He also accused the police of living double standards as they were unhesitant to pick up the protestors but failed to interrupt the funeral ceremony of the late General Secretary of the NPP, Sir John, which saw many flout the Covid-19 safety protocols.
Mr George noted that since the said event, the police have failed to arrest and interrogate the organisers.
“The country appears to be working with two different laws. You would have expected the police service to go about shutting down the funeral of Sir John, or the crowds that we are seeing accompany His Excellency, the President as he is campaigning. Those were unlawful assemblies. I mean the crowds that have been lined up – the school children lined up intentionally to await the arrival of the President, is an unlawful assembly. It is an unlawful gathering, did they seek the Public Order Act?
“They are more than the protestors but the police are not shutting them down. So we seem to have two regimes of law,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
Mahama renews advocacy for UN reform to grant Africa permanent representation on Security Council
21 minutes -
A national position has already been taken – Sheikh Shaibu questions renewed LGBTQ+ debate
32 minutes -
Anti-LGBTQ+ bill: Don’t turn this into a political football – Sheikh Shaibu warns NDC and NPP
51 minutes -
2026 World Cup: Let’s be positive about squad, manager – Jordan Ayew urges Ghanaians
1 hour -
Washing bay attendant remanded over alleged theft of friend’s GH¢46,306 for betting
1 hour -
Eight people killed in Mali after bus hits land mine, says union official
2 hours -
Ivory Coast sees strong exports of cocoa main crop as El Nino looms over output
2 hours -
Dangote refinery can be global jet fuel supplier, CEO says
2 hours -
Oil jumps on Mideast missiles while AI bulls carry stocks higher
2 hours -
Macron, Kagame inaugurate Rwanda genocide memorial in Paris
2 hours -
CBS News fires Scott Pelley from 60 Minutes, sources say
2 hours -
South African politician seeks US refuge on fears of future persecution
2 hours -
Zimbabwe presses ahead with bill that would extend president’s term to 2030
5 hours -
Zverev to face Mensik after ending Jodar run
5 hours -
Bellingham is No 10 in England World Cup squad
5 hours