Audio By Carbonatix
Brigadier General Joseph Aphour of the Ghana Armed Forces has explained that the military personnel deployed to quell the riotous situation caused by the protesting youth of Ejura Sekyedumase on June 29, applied minimal force to control the crowd because they fired at the officers.
Brigadier-General Aphour made this statement on Wednesday, when he appeared before the Three-Member Committee probing the incident which resulted in the death of two persons while four others were left with gunshot wounds.
“At that stage, it was becoming too bad for them to see civilians firing from the crowd, I think the commander at that stage then had to use minimum force by trying to fire to maim those people who were involved.
“But for what we did that day, we believe and strongly believe that there would have been more deaths if we actually fired indiscriminately. More would have died but we tried to nail the people, we used the minimum force, and we were able to control the situation,” he told the Committee.
The irate youth of Ejura on June 29, hit the streets to protest against the killing of one Ibrahim Mohammed, aka Kaaka Macho.
Brigadier General Joseph Aphour stated that he was not present at Ejura during the protest, but was optimistic that his account is fairly accurate because he received the incident report from the Battalion Commander.
“I wasn’t there in Ejura. I was sitting in Kumasi and monitoring everything and my Battalion Commander was briefing me. At every stage, we send what we call the incident report to our Headquarters in Accra."
He emphasized that had the military personnel exerted intense force, there would have been lots of casualties.
Responding to concerns in respect of military personnel not being equipped with crowd control skills for which reason they should not have been involved in the Ejura incident, the Brigadier General said information they received on Sunday, June 27, indicated that the Police needed the assistance of the Military due to the nature of the situation in the community.
He said on Monday, June 28, while the Military was on a patrol, they heard there was a mass-up of the civilians heading to the cemetery to bury the deceased [Ibrahim Mohammed] “and particularly we heard that they were at the Police station and there was a need for us to intervene because if we didn’t intervene, things would go out of hand.”
Latest Stories
-
Ghana not immediately threatened by fuel shortages – Energy Ministry
3 minutes -
Ghana records eight deaths, over 1,000 mpox cases since May 2025 – Health Minister
3 minutes -
X probes offensive Grok chatbot posts as AI safety concerns intensify
5 minutes -
Planet One announces TVET projects worth $327m in three West African countries
12 minutes -
UN Chief condemns attack on Ghanaian peacekeepers in Lebanon, demands accountability
18 minutes -
US-Israeli air campaign hits hundreds of military targets in new wave of Iran strikes
22 minutes -
Ghana must lead Africa in criminalising environmental destruction – Annoh-Dompreh
24 minutes -
US-Israeli war against Iran enters new phase with rise of hardline successor Mojtaba Khamenei
29 minutes -
Kofi Adu Domfeh honoured with Excellence in Climate Journalism and Advocacy Award
30 minutes -
WPL 2025/26: Hasaacas, Ampem Darkoa Ladies close in on another final
32 minutes -
Bole MP donates GHS200,000 to support teacher training college establishment
47 minutes -
Danyame Old Town residents face eviction on a land occupied for 200 years
50 minutes -
60% of our water bodies are polluted – Minority Chief Whip pushes Ecocide Law
50 minutes -
Gov’t distributes seized ‘galamsey’ water pumps to farmers to boost irrigation – Dumelo
57 minutes -
MC Abeiku Sarkcess ignites Sarkodie’s Rapperholic UK with high-energy command
1 hour
