Audio By Carbonatix
Anti-Fraud Professional and Lecturer, Ransford Nana Addo Jnr, has called for stricter checks at Ghana’s ports and customs to stop stolen vehicles from entering the country.
Speaking on JoyNews’ AM Show during a discussion on the stolen car trade in Ghana and the recent case involving musician Shatta Wale’s vehicle, Nana Addo Jnr said the problem stems from weak surveillance systems at entry points.
“Irrespective of who is buying the vehicle, whether an importer or dealer, so far as it gets to the shores of this country or borders, if we are working with our international partners like the FBI and Interpol, and a vehicle is branded as stolen, we should ask the authorities questions – how did these vehicles get registered in this country?” he asked.
He noted that many Ghanaians assume cars cleared by customs are genuine.
“The average Ghanaian would take the duty document and car papers and say that so far as customs has actually stamped it, it is genuine. So if customs has given the go-ahead, and it goes through licensing, people assume the process is clean,” he said.
According to him, the real weakness lies at the ports. “I think the point where we need to tighten will be at the ports and our customs. Whether it is an importer or an individual, the collaboration between our security agencies has to be on point,” he stated.
He referenced the ongoing case involving Dancehall Artist Shatta Wale, whose vehicle was recently seized by the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) after being flagged as stolen.
“Indeed, if this is a 2019 vehicle and we assume it was stolen about a year ago, by now it should have been flagged on the various portals of the CID, DVLA, and Customs division. We should not have waited for the FBI to come into town. If we had already received notification that this vehicle was stolen, then it should never have passed through our system in the first place,” he explained.
He added that even if international notifications arrive late, Ghanaian authorities should be able to trace and impound such vehicles before foreign agencies intervene.
“There are very luxurious vehicles in town being driven by some people, and you notice that the vehicle registration doesn’t match the year of manufacturing. That should be a red flag,” he cautioned.
Read also: EOCO flags Honda CR-Vs, Range Rovers and two others in crackdown on stolen cars
Latest Stories
-
Nadowli-Kaleo District marks 69th Independence Day with cultural exhibition, academic awards
19 minutes -
Confusion, tension rock NPP polling station registration exercise in Tarkwa-Nsuaem
43 minutes -
Burger King opens first Kumasi branch in Ahodwo
1 hour -
Burma Camp Tennis Club hosts successful 12th Ghana–Nigeria Independence Day Tennis Tournament
1 hour -
Rights, justice and action for all women and girls must include women and girls with disabilities
1 hour -
The Lover and the Fighter: China, the west, and Africa’s geopolitical awakening
2 hours -
UCC student dies in tragic road accident on campus
2 hours -
Health Ministry establishes committee to probe death of hit-and-run victim
2 hours -
RTI Commission, NACOC explore collaboration to promote transparency and accountability
2 hours -
Three dead as truck overturns near Asenema Waterfalls
3 hours -
Four Ghanaian UN peacekeepers recovering after Lebanon missile attack — Defence Ministry
3 hours -
Police restore calm at Twifo Bimpong-Agya after youth clash kills one
4 hours -
US court hears how Ghanaian scammer made over $10m posing as fake romantic partner
4 hours -
Pakistani man found guilty in Iran-backed plot to kill US politicians
4 hours -
Footage shows US citizen shot by ICE agent in Texas traffic stop
4 hours
