Audio By Carbonatix
The United State Embassy in Ghana has condemned the “illegal disclosure” of drug related issues in Ghana by Wikileaks, a website dedicated to publishing classified diplomatic information.
The website published the correspondence between the US Embassy in Ghana and the US State Department which contained damning revelation on Ghana’s attempted fight against the narcotic trade.
The report or correspondence implicates high profile officials of the Narcotic Control Board and some officials of the John Kufuor administration as having been compromised by some drug barons.
The said officials allegedly gave information to the drug barons on which period it was safe to transport narcotics from the country.
The report also applauded Mills’ efforts in fighting the drug menace but said the President had told the ex-US Ambassador, Donald Teitelbaum that some of his appointees may have been compromised by the drug barons.
The publication has evoked widespread controversy among some of the political players in the country.
But the Information Officer at the US Embassy told Joy News’ Sammy Darko the disclosure could put people’s lives in danger and could harm US relations.
Ben East would not confirm or deny the contents as published by wikileaks but said such disclosures are unacceptable.
He said the publication could threaten national security of the two countries.
But the Executive Secretary of NACOB Akrasi Sarpong said portions of the publication are untrue.
According to him, he has had an extensive discussion with President Mills and will be shocked if the alleged discussion between John Mills and Donald Teitelbaum actually took place.
He said the president would have long taken action against the compromised officials if indeed it was true.
He however corroborated the portion of the wikileaks publication which said the VVIP lounge of the Kotoka International Airport was used by some selected pastors, bankers and wives for their travels.
He suspected some of them might have exploited that privilege to transport drugs from the country.
Story by Nathan Gadugah/Myjoyonline.com/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
-
BoG issues new guidelines for operation of non-resident margin accounts, strengthens FX rules
4 minutes -
NSA, Absa Bank partner to introduce overdraft for service personnel allowances
16 minutes -
Police arrest seven traders over suspected adulterated palm oil in Koforidua
20 minutes -
Hervé Renard dismissed from his post as Saudi Arabia manager
22 minutes -
Ghana’s free primary healthcare programme: Advancing equitable access to health and strengthening financial security.
27 minutes -
Why legal scrutiny of the OSP must not be mistaken for anti-corruption sabotage
29 minutes -
Daily Insight for CEOs: Sustaining execution momentum across organisation
31 minutes -
President Marcos says key suspect in Philippine corruption firestorm arrested
31 minutes -
Maverick Research launches Mapela.io to deliver faster, more scalable market intelligence across emerging economies
35 minutes -
Ola SHS urges girls to pursue science and improve time management
46 minutes -
Photos: GIMPA hosts Pre-ICW 2026 seminar to advance leadership and coaching
46 minutes -
Akufo-Addo created OSP out of bitterness—NDC Communicator
60 minutes -
‘I was tortured and lost my hand’ – one student’s struggle to get an education in Nigeria
1 hour -
Harry and Meghan meet Bondi shooting survivors
1 hour -
NACOC warns public over fake recruitment claims
1 hour