Two arrested by Ghana Immigration Service for attempting to traffick 42 children to Nigeria
Two persons
were arrested over the crime. The suspects identified as Paul Waabem, 24
a Ghanaian from Tatale, resident in Nigeria, and Moses Yaw Kumah, 27, a
Togolese, who also lives in
Nigeria were remanded in prison custody and reappeared in court
yesterday, February 23, 2016. Thirty-three
of the children were rescued first and nine others later.
The Northern Regional Commander of the Ghana Immigration Service
(GIS), Assistant Director of Immigration (ADI), Mr Eric Afari,(pictured) who
disclosed this in Tamale on Saturday, February 20, said the command had intensified
its border patrols in the eastern corridor of the Northern Region to
clamp down on the activities of child traffickers.
He said child trafficking was on the ascendency in the area and,
therefore, appealed to residents in the area to assist the service with
credible information to track down child traffickers in the area.
Afari was speaking during the visit of members of the GIS
Board. The team was led by its chairman, Mr Cletus Avoka (pictured)
Members of the GIS board interacted with officers and men of the
service in the Northern Region to know their operational challenges and
how best they could be resolved.
Mr Afari said the command faced a lot of logistical constraints,
including means of transport, the problems of inadequate number of
offices and lack of residential accommodation, which together are
hampering their operations in the region.
Increase in approved routes.
Increase in approved routes.
He called for an increase in the approved routes in the area since
the stretch from Oti-Damanko to Nakpanduri was a ‘weak link’ because
there were only three officially gazetted entry points which were
outnumbered by the unapproved crossing points on the stretch. The stretch constituted the gateway to the inflow of criminal
elements, Fulani herdsmen, arms proliferation and the smuggling of
contrabands.
The Director of Immigration, Mr Felix Yaw Sarpong, charged personnel at the various entry points of the country to
eschew extortion and other negative practices that had the tendency to
tarnish the image of the service and send bad signals to foreigners such
as investors and tourists.
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