As quoted in the Section 5 of Narcotic Drugs Control Enforcement and
Sanctions Act, 1990 PNDC Law 236, “a person shall not, without lawful
authority or excuse, smoke, sniff, consume, inject into the body or
otherwise administer a narcotic drug on the body of that person.” Unless
there have been some unknown changes in the
NDCEFS Act.
NDCEFS Act.
“We wish to state that all persons, whether visiting or native who does
an act in contravention of the above quoted Act shall be dealt with in
accordance with the law; as in the case of Chris Brown, a docket has
been opened and we would want to assure the good people of Ghana that
the police will do everything possible to get to the bottom of it”, DSP
Cephas Arthur, Director of Public Affairs at the Ghana Police Service
emphasized in a statement released on March 11, 2013.
“Meanwhile, we are calling on the public to exercise patience, in the
interest of due process and in respect of the rule of law, and provide
the police with relevant information in support of the due process,” the
statement assured.
In the early hours of Wednesday (6th March, 2013), American RnB star,
Chris Brown in a full glare of cameras threw caution and decorum to the
wind and openly endorsed the smoking of Ghana’s banned and illegal
substance ‘weed’ to the surprise of his audience while performing on RLG
sponsored platform at the Hope City Concert-Accra Sports Stadium, a
show that started on the eve of Ghana’s Independence Day.
After smoking, Chris Brown flew off the country amid huge media
discussions, coupled with police promise and assurances, but has Ghana
Police Service said or done anything about Chris Brown-‘weed’
saga-investigation after many months of his total disregard to the
country’s law with impunity?
Initially, even the public knew the police were just blabbing since they
have, in most instances, flopped investigating anything druggy,
including the ‘Cocaine turned Konkonte powder’ and ‘confirmed Cocaine
substance turned into sodium bicarbonate when the court took custody’, a
few to mention.
It is ridiculous and indeed outrageous how the police administration
pays lip service to matters relating to drugs and criminality in recent
times.
Their typical defensive and fanciful assurances to the public usually
result to nothing and it is imperative to mention that the agency
(Police) have now become paper tigers instead of “an institution of
action”.
Unlike issues on Cocaine, culprits caught smoking or possessing “weed”
(Indian Hemp) are immediately hurriedly arraigned for court hearing
without slight investigations, yet they face the full exactitude of the
law, spending at least 10 to 20 years imprisonment.
As reported by Ghana News Agency on March 26, 2009: “Farmer jailed 15
years for possessing ‘weed’”. “The Juaso Circuit Court presided over by
Mr. S. K. Sarpong Appiah, has sentenced a 28-year-old farmer to 15
years’ imprisonment in hard labor for possessing narcotic drugs. Kwame
Sasu Hayford pleaded guilty to the charge of possessing narcotic drugs
without authority.”
It is now glaring that the several assurances made in the media on Chris
Brown’s case was a PR gimmick and a knee-jerk reaction by the police to
douse the raging flames at the time. I, therefore, dare the police
administration to come public with their findings if indeed any
investigations took place. Mr. IGP this is not an attack but a humble
challenge to your outfit to come clean on Chris Brown’s ‘weed’ saga to
help salvage the deteriorating image of police.
But, if Mr. IGP has too much on his hands, I guess he can delegate his
able Director of Public Affairs, DSP Cephas Arthur to set the records
straight. I rest my case!
So now i ask. Do you think our police force is working according to the constitution or not?
So now i ask. Do you think our police force is working according to the constitution or not?
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