The Police
Intelligence and Professional Standards Bureau under the Ghana Police Service
said 108 Police Officers were dismissed between January 2011 and June 2013
after they were found guilty of various offences.
The Ghana Country Report of the
Human Right Commission available to the Bureau said 132 officers were reduced
in rank, 239 received warning and 433 cases pending.
This was revealed by Mr Mustapha
Abdallah, Research Officer at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping
Training Centre, Accra, at a seminar organized by the Commission on Human
Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) in commemoration of UN Day in support
of victims of torture.
The seminar, comprising of
security agencies, including Prisons Service and Immigration Service is on the
theme: “Eliminating Torture: A crime against humanity.”
He said the legal framework
governing the work of the police is the Ghana Police Service Act 1970 (Act 350)
and that the Inspector-General of Police has overall responsibility for the
prevention of crime, the enforcement of law and order, the promotion of the
safety of citizens and respect for human rights.
According to Mr Abdallah the
situation on the ground regarding the practice of torture or ill-treatment by
the police is in relation to abuses in some cases during arrest, transfer to
police stations and interrogation, but there was no evidence that those abuses
were part of a widespread pattern or systemic practice.
He said the study conducted at
the Nkawkaw Central Police station, Ejisu Police station, the Cape Coast
regional Police station and Kotokuraba central police station noted that
traumatic scars on inmates’ bodies were consistent with allegations of beatings
with canes or batons.
Mr Abdallah said at the Nkawkaw
Police station, the report examined two detainees who had physical injuries,
which were consistent with their testimonies of recent beatings by fists or
blunt instruments used by police during the course of their arrests,
transportation and, in particular, interrogation.
“The majority of the detainees
interviewed by the Special Rapporteur had no complaints about their treatment
by prison officials, although they sometimes alleged ill-treatment by the
police” the report added.
Mr Abdallah said over-crowding is
a major problem in the prisons, stressing that the level of over-crowding and
the ratio of prison staff to prisoners is severely distorted.
He mentioned the Kumasi prison as
one of the most densely overpopulated prisons, where the officer-inmate ratio
is 1:20 rather than the recommended 1:4.
Ms Laureta Vivian Lamptey,
Commissioner for the CHRAJ, said June 26, is a day set aside by the UN globally
to raise awareness as well as remind all about the need to guard against any
acts that undermined the dignity of the individual or groups.
She said Ghana is a state party
to the UN Convention against Torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment, which has the responsibility to implement the tenets
of the international instrument.
Ms Lamptey said the objective of
the seminar was to ensure that participants understood the standard minimum
rules for the treatment of prisoners and developed a more humane strategy for
handling suspected criminals including arrest and retrieval of information
during investigation.
(GNA)
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