Thursday, August 26, 2010

Liaise with police to set up more tent cities

Page 67: Daily Graphic, August 16, 2010.
Story: Albert K. Salia
THE Ghana Police Service has appealed to residents of sprawling communities without police stations to co-operate with the police for the establishment of tent cities in their localities to fight armed robbery and residential crimes in those areas.
An initiative of the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Mr Paul Tawiah Quaye, the tent cities are to serve as a first point of call by residents to relay information on suspected criminal activities or suspicious characters in those areas.
Each of the tent cities will be provided with a telephone number to serve the communities and reduce time of response to distress calls.
Since its establishment last year, the number of tent cities has increased from the initial four to nine in the Accra-Tema police regions.
The Director of Public Affairs of the Ghana Police Service, Superintendent Kwesi Ofori, told the Daily Graphic yesterday that the IGP had revised the operations of the tent cities project, with each tent city placed under an operational force of the police.
Hitherto, he said, personnel were randomly selected and posted to the tent cities, but it was detected that it was creating problems, especially with the change over of personnel and logistics.
Supt Ofori said the IGP had placed 10 vehicles at the disposal of the existing tent cities to enhance their operations,
while the personnel were now receiving ration while on duty, which was not the case when the project started last year.
He, however, said a major challenge facing the establishment of the tent cities was the non-co-operation of some residents.
He said conditions in the tent cities were not the best, as personnel had to struggle to answer the call of nature and encountered problems in trying to seek information on security problems in those communities from residents.
He said there were some communities, particularly the EMEFS and Regimannuel estates, who had co-operated so well with the police that the tent city project was working effectively in those areas.
Supt Ofori said since the establishment of the tent city at Emefs Estate, for instance, robberies and thefts in the area had stopped.
He said besides the estate developer moving the tent city team into a building, the residents had also appointed co-ordinators for various zones to co-ordinate reports with the police team.
He said other areas where the tent cities were currently located were REDCO Flats, Dome, Taifa-Burkina, Roman Ridge, Achimota Golf Park, West and East Legon, Manet Court and Dzorwulu.
The Director of Public Affairs said supervisors had also been appointed to monitor the activities of personnel on duty to ensure that they performed the duties assigned them.
He said the IGP was determined to bring policing to the doorstep of Ghanaians and, therefore, appealed for public support to ensure that the project succeeded.
Supt. Ofori urged the communities in which the tent cities would be sited to co-operate with the personnel and not see their presence as intimidatory, adding, “We are targeting criminals and not innocent people.”
He said as part of their duties, the personnel would be available to provide security talks for churches and schools in the vicinities in which they were located.
He said those on the specialised day patrols would be visiting homes and workplaces to interact with those they met to discuss their security concerns.

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