Audio By Carbonatix
President of the Ghana Journalists Association (GJA), Albert Kwabena Dwumfour, says journalists in Ghana must not be subjected to inhumane treatment, as he demanded the immediate investigation, arrest, and prosecution of military officers involved in the recent alleged assault on journalists in Walewale.
Speaking at the Ghana International Press Centre in Accra on Wednesday, January 28, Mr Dwumfour described the attacks as unacceptable and warned that journalists must be protected, not attacked, in the course of performing their professional duties.
He called for swift action- the immediate investigation, arrest, and prosecution of the military officers involved in the Walewale assault- by the military authorities, stressing that failure to act decisively would force the Association to take further steps.
Mr Dwumfour disclosed that although the Association was initially tempted to issue an ultimatum to the military high command, it had decided to wait for the military’s official response following its press briefing.
“We were tempted to give an ultimatum to the military high command, but we will leave it since they said they are waiting for us to finish with our presser so that they can react, or they will also come out with their reaction,” he said.
He added that the GJA would carefully consider the military’s response before making its next move.
“We will wait for the reaction of the military high command, and after that we will come out and make our petitions known,” Mr Dwumfour stated.
The GJA President further expressed frustration over what he described as a pattern of inaction by the military, citing a previous case involving Joy FM journalist Carlos Calony.
“We still have our ultimatum, and we know… because already there is a pending case involving Joy FM’s Carlos Calony, for which we paid a courtesy call on the military high command, the CDS on that matter. They gave us all the assurance and promised to give us daily or periodic briefing updates on the matter, which they failed to do, and they’ve not spoken about this matter till date,” he said.
He stressed that the Walewale incident represented a second unresolved issue and warned that continued delays would not be tolerated.
“So this one is a second issue they are handling, and we are saying that they should take swift action on this matter, or we would advise ourselves,” Mr Dwumfour cautioned.
Mr Dwumfour underscored the importance of mutual respect between the media and the military, noting that while both institutions depended on each other, journalists must be protected rather than attacked.
“The military needs us, and we also need them, but they should know that they cannot subject us to inhumane treatment and put our lives in danger or anything,” he said.
He further emphasised the role of journalists in national development and the need for security agencies to safeguard, not threaten, media practitioners.
“We are serving our nation, and for that matter, we need their protection, not their attack,” he added.
Looking ahead, the GJA President announced plans for high-level consultations within the media industry and with key partners, which could lead to a firmer stance on the matter.
“We will in the coming days come out with a firmer stance on the attacks after a high-level engagement with key stakeholders in the media,” he said.
He revealed that a series of stakeholder meetings had already been scheduled for the week.
“We are calling for key stakeholder engagement, which is happening this week. Heads of media institutions, editors, past GJA executives, our key partner institutions, or sister institutions… we are meeting to take a firm position, a stand on these attacks,” Mr Dwumfour stated.
Latest Stories
-
Legacy Girls’ College celebrates national recognition of two students at 2025 WASSCE
1 minute -
Oil price jumps despite deal to release record amount of reserves
10 minutes -
Sahara Group commissions 40,000cbm Asharami Ghana LPG vessel to advance clean energy access in Ghana
18 minutes -
Ghana’s Ambassador to Côte d’Ivoire marks 69th independence day with call to ‘build prosperity and restore hope’
19 minutes -
COCOBOD to distribute 27,000 sprayers and 89,000 PPE sets to cocoa farmers
28 minutes -
Ntim Fordjour accuses NDC of ‘double standards’ over presidential travel
34 minutes -
Israel–Iran war shakes global insurance industry; Ghana may face heavy impact – Dr Kingsley Agyemang
37 minutes -
DJ Mensah calls for national support for Rapperholic UK as Sarkodie eyes O2 Arena
39 minutes -
COCOBOD disburses GH¢4.2bn to Licensed Buying Companies to settle cocoa farmers’ arrears
41 minutes -
Rebecca Ekpe launches mentorship programme for young journalists and digital creators
42 minutes -
Home Support: How we can use Ghanaians living in the diaspora to form supporter groups for the 2026 World Cup and save millions
49 minutes -
NPP communicator, Senyo Amekplenu seeks audit service expenditure details under RTI
55 minutes -
British man charged in Dubai for alleged filming of Iranian missiles
58 minutes -
The mirage of president’s special initiatives – Mahama’s “Legacy Projects”, or another monuments of waste?
59 minutes -
British man charged in Dubai for alleged filming of Iranian missiles
1 hour
