Understanding the Overloaded Police Service
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
Nowhere in Ghana’s budding democracy has
any of its institutions been
critically tested for fuller scrutiny than its police
service.
The examination runs in an African atmosphere where
indiscipline is an increasingly serious social issue,
where states had collapsed and politics paralyzed, where
threats of civil wars sometimes flicker, where the
tarnished Big Men overly make threats and incites the
desperate youth, where armed robbery is a rising menace,
where civic virtues are weak and destruction-minded
traditional juju-marabou spiritualists support
criminals, and some ancient traditions resist to reason
with modernity for law and order.
It is in such climate that the chair of research at the
Kofi Annan Peace Keeping Training Centre, Emmanuel Kwesi
Aning, has observed that “there is a dangerous
increasing sense of insecurity…there is a systemic
failure somewhere and that systemic failure is beginning
to be so widespread that people just don’t respect the
law anymore because the security system has broken down
basically…Because those who are at the front-lines are
badly trained, the recruitment is poor, is looked at
through the political lens, their ability even to
analyze and then suggest responses is also looked at
through the political lens and because there is an
ulterior motive in securitizing problems in Ghana that
does not look at these problems through the Ghana lens”
“The response mechanisms are always very narrow, focused
on attaining particular narrow needs and is not put in a
more holistic response strategy…This narrowness and this
parochial approach at understanding security and
responding to the challenges that arise…is what is
leading to the breakdown…lack of confidence in the
state’s ability to adequately protect the citizenry.”
Touted as the healthiest democracy in a difficult West
Africa, how the Ghana Police Service significantly
handles Ghana’s burgeoning democracy by rigorously
enforcing the rule of law, freedoms and human rights
would tell how democratic institutions would grow and
help refine some of the inhibitions within traditional
values that have been entangling progress. More
critically is how the police service manages the
challenges of traditional values that conflict with
modernity. The Asantehene-Techiman-Tuobodom traditional
quarrel that has caused some deaths, among others, more
mired in ancient traditional allegiances than modern
practices, reveals the tension between certain antique
traditions and modernity. The Ghana Police Service, as
the key frontline security institution, has to deal with
this conundrum.
For the past months, the police have come into the
forefront of public discourse, some bordering on its
internal sins. While the police problems may emanate
from larger Ghanaian moral troubles, some like Augustine
Gyening, head of the Tema Regional Police Commander,
echoing security connoisseur Kwesi Aning, “blamed the
worrying but rising numbers of policemen involved in
robberies on poor recruitment exercises engaged in by
the police administration.” The Joy FM has reported that
“six policemen and their four civilian accomplices were
in November of 2009 sentenced to 20 years jail terms
each for robbing a businessman of his money, at
gun-point, while another policeman was arraigned before
court at Techiman for selling three AK47 assault rifles
belong to the police.”
The reasons reflect not only the current security
situation of Ghana, which had being suppressed under the
long-running one-party and military regimes of
yesteryears and the unhelpful threatening utterances of
some Big Men, but the fact that Ghanaians are yet to
come to terms with the police service in relation to
their existence since the police institution is a
colonial creation that didn’t factor in Ghanaians
traditional values and institutions. Kwesi Aning has
touted the “need for the security systems to be
restructured so they shed their colonial mentality.”
This is part of the main challenge between the police
service and certain traditional values/institutions –
how to situate the police service into traditional
values/institutions in such a way that it will reflect
Ghanaians’ core values and simultaneously help refine
antiquated traditional practices such as human sacrifice
and witchcraft that impinge on modern rule of law,
freedom and human rights. When the Asantehene threatened
to kidnap the Techimanhene if he sets foot on Ashanti
region for publicly kidnapping and disgracing the
Tuobodomhene, who owes allegiance to the Asantehene, he
was talking traditional have been clashing with
modernity. Here the police become entrapped in the
schisms between tradition and modernity.
This may be part of the reason why, say, the Ghanaian or
the Nigerian who have experienced myriad security
problems will tell you despicable stories about the
police, yet they have no clue how the police works and
the problem the police go through everyday to secure
their lives in their respective countries in a complex
and fragile region.
The dangers the police faces in attempting to protect
Ghanaians was echoed in 2004 by The Ghanaian Chronicle:
“If the average citizen knew how difficult the work of
the police is, perhaps he would then begin to appreciate
and respect the men and women who have opted to maintain
law and order as peace officers. Particularly in a
country such as ours where illiteracy is dominant and
ignorance of the law is considered the norm, the police
service has an unenviable and uphill task making sure
that the rule of law is upheld.”
For the rationale that the Ghana police have been used
by different political regimes to their whims and
caprices, Ghanaians do not trust the police much. In a
nascent multiparty democracy mired in multi-faceted
tribalism any police action is interpreted by those of
the divide as “politically motivated.” In Sierra Leone
the police was tribalised under the Siaka Stevens
one-party regime, making it mistrustful, ineffective and
an easy run-over by Foday Sankoh’s rebel group, the
Revolutionary United Front.
In the heavily mess up Democratic Republic of Congo, the
police under President Mobutu Sese Seko was so
unprofessionally politicized that it blinded their
objectivity in a profoundly complicated nation. No doubt
today the country has over 20,000 UN security forces
(the largest in the world) trying vainly to maintain law
and order in a mucky and multi-sided ancestral
atmosphere that resemble Colonel Kurtz’s drugged out
slaughters in Apocalypse Now.
This is against the security fact, which defies any
police operations that Congo-Kinshasa is so helpless in
policing itself that, under Washington’s reasoning, as
the BBC reports, Kinshasa has “invited” the militaries
of three foreign countries, Uganda, Rwanda and South
Sudan, to control “in or around” Congo-Kinshasa’s
“edges”. The disturbing fact, security-wise, or more
appropriate, police-wise, is that despite having the
“trappings of sovereignty” Congo-Kinshasa do “not” have
“much modern government or control outside the main
cities.”
Just imagine the police in such complicated security
algebraic equation and have the feel, as a human being,
how overloaded the police are.
It is in such broader development that in 2004, a
Ghanaian commentator wrote that, “Under the Provisional
National Defence Committee (PNDC) and later under the
government of the National Democratic Congress (NDC, of
the Rawlings presidency) nobody trusted the police…” The
police service was almost paralyzed to the delight of
the tyrant and undemocratic Jerry Rawlings in the name
of his convoluted military security apparatus that
created more security predicaments and saw the police
service effectively paralyzed for long time and saw the
Ghana Armed Forces wrongly taking over some police
duties.
No doubt, throughout Ghana and Africa, people's
misunderstanding of their civic responsibilities in
relation to the police has gone as far as attacking the
police in the course of undertaking their duties. In
states like Nigeria, Congo-Kinshasa and Cote d'Ivoire
gratuitous people have found it a fair game to attack
police stations, and fatally assaulted the police in the
course of doing their constitutional jobs. This shows
that African citizens, after almost 50 years of
independence from colonial rule, have weak grasp of the
civic duties of the police, especially in dangerous and
poverty-stricken places like Bawku and Yendi.
In a Ghana and Africa where poverty is widespread,
influence of traditional spiritualists a daily affair,
moral decay on the prowl, crime on the increase, youth
let loose and threats of civil wars real and present
danger, just imagine being a police officer. Just
imagine being a police officer in Congo-Kinshasa with
its intractable and complex conflicts involving numerous
countries and factions that have claimed 5.4 million
people between 1998 and 2008 with a continuing average
of 45,000 deaths per month.
Or just picture being a police officer and confronting
frustrated youth attackers in Bawku, Dadgon or Jos. This
shadow self of African cities, where the police
repeatedly clash with armed robbers and angry youth over
varied issues, some realistic and others unrealistic, is
Africa's own disintegration self, the awful pointer of
what will happen when the worst transpires, as when the
Ivorien police woke up one day and found their once
peaceful country divided into two by rebel-soldiers. In
such apparent peril the police left their duties for the
deadly rebels.
African civilization under blockade from dim-witted
African Big Men, hypothetically, will come unstuck.
Anarchy will break loose in Bawku and weeds pushed up
the Bawku wasteland, and the police will slide into a
paramilitary tribe at war with either rebel groups or
gangsters or senseless youth or the youthful armed
robbers that go howling through the Accra wastelands
like the phenomenal African military coup makers, AK47
runners.
This hypothetical dream contains some few serrated
elements of truth. Some African cities have come to look
dangerously like their anti-selves: the proverbial
African Big Men threats, civil wars and grimy,
multi-sided conflicts, homelessness, growing slums,
increasing armed robbery, joblessness, homicides,
prostitution, debts deepening, revenue shortage,
services disintegrating, poverty, crime and drugs
showing their open, permanent reality.
As for the clannish African police, they have been at
war for some time in Freetown, in Bawku, in Jos and in
other cities, though not in the better parts of African
cities' neighbourhood. In Accra, the police, for years,
are increasingly being dared to find those who have been
killing women in juju/marabou-inspired ritualistic ways.
This and other clashes like that in Bawku and Jos reveal
the lawlessness that the African nightmare predicts:
stunning, granular, and bizarre.
Watching Ghanaian and African police in action in places
like Bawku, Yendi and Jos and thinking about other
police brutality incidents – the police conniving with
rebels groups or armed robbers, for example – Africans
felt wonder, horror or, in some African cases, disgust
at the police. In such situations, Africans side with
the mass media for putting searchlight on the police.
The African police do not have good relationship with
the African media - there is always love-hate
relationship.
The lasting reaction to the Ghanaian and African police,
say, melting rough justice to demonstrators in Bawku,
Nairobi, Jos or Bamako, besides outrage of one kind or
another, may have been a sense of being in the presence
of mystery. How is a group of people given such power?
In places like Sierra Leone, where rebels mixed easily
with non-rebel civilians, it was difficult for the
police not to be paranoid, when sifting through who is a
rebel and who is not. The Ghana Police Service is
experiencing same between its officers turned armed
robbers. But, yet still, the average Ghanaian do cry out
against police for gross, offhanded brutality, dealt out
by the guardians of the law, seemed strange enough and
disturbing on a fairly deep emotional and moral level.
The beating of the student demonstrators in Accra in
2004, under Ghana’s developing democracy, the police not
acting on some impulse of the moment, seem desultory and
methodical at the same time. Police stroll around the
streets of Accra. It looks like an impromptu RUF social
occasion, where limbs are flying in the sky and the evil
self let loose on innocent people but yet society
appears helpless. In such a situation, there is future
shock and an odd familiarity in the streets of Bawku,
Kivu or Lagos in the scene: it has some of the feel of a
colonial police teaching the “uncivilized” Africans
sense – an African throwback migrated to the slave
trading era of armed raids.
The police service in the African traditional sense did
not exist in Africa (the traditional African community
was itself a police service, everyone a police officer);
it was brought, like most structures existing now, by
the colonialists. The mystery is how can a group of
people be given such power, for what? For law and order:
to teach the people where power lies. How does a group
of otherwise normal people turn into a mob capable of
killing people (as in Bawku), beating people (as in
Yendi) and brutalizing people (as in Tuobodom)? Among
the police they will tell you they are gentle people
going about their business like any other responsible
citizen. The police have families like any other
citizen, and do come from within the same people who
have been clashing and insulting the police.
The questions about the Ghanaian/African police are both
social and personal. Sociologists will tell you, in
Freudian terms, that the law is supposed to perform the
function of the superego, policing the wild of Bawku,
Yendi, Techiman or Accra and the violent id in the
plains of Dafur and Tuobodom. The police principle goes
to work when the id takes over from the superego and put
on a green or blue or khaki uniform (as the various
African police services/forces uniforms show), when
police authority goes wild.
My paternal aunt, Paulina Adutwum, a sergeant in the
Ghana Police Service, will tell you that most African
police officers are decent men and women doing
honourable work in a very dangerous period in Africa's
transition, where arms and drugs are easy to get in
Bawku, Kivu or Soweto today than Kwame Nkrumah’s era.
The civil wars, porous borders, globalization, and
political paralysis have made the Ghanaian/African
police work more precarious. It is partly for that
reason that the Ghanaian police's transformation from
group to mob, as in Bawku, when the police are chasing
armed tribal attackers, is hard to understand. And as
Adutwum would again tell you, the dangerous work the
police do, for modest salaries and poor conditions, is
also brutalizing.
African criminologists say the homicide rate in Africa
has jumped over the years. In big cities like Lagos,
Accra or Abidjan most felony offenders have been
arrested before, and some have at least one prior
conviction. Robbers and drug gangs are often armed with
automatic weapons more sophisticated than the handguns
the African police carry. How can, say, the police in
Kivu deal with lethally armed tribal gangs? Or as the
Ghanaian police is finding out in post-Rawlings Ghana,
how can they deal with proliferation of AK47s?
A career of dealing with such situation of vicious,
conscienceless criminal-enemy frightens and frays the
nerves. It drives the African police deeper into the
solidarities of their professional tribe. There they
find the support and understanding they feel they do not
get from the ignorant citizenry. The African public
prefers their innocence, does not want to know the
violent lengths to which the African police sometimes go
when trying to contain armed attackers in Bawku or Yendi
to enforce the law.
Security expert Aning argues “the need for the
authorities to pursue a paradigm shift in the manner in
which the security services are treated, reminding the
president (John Atta Mills) that the buck stop with him,
so he must make sure the police in particular are
properly funded, resourced and trained so as to help
them maintain the Ghana’s peace and security.” In a
Ghana with over 23 million people, the Ghana Police
Service’s problems are made worse by the fact that while
the “police service had a numerical strength of about
37,000 in 1991, that number had dwindled to about 19,000
in 2010, juxtaposed with increasing population,”
revealed Aning.
Nigerian or Ghanaian police will tell you that the terms
“war against crime” and “war on drugs” encourage, and
sometimes, demand an all-out attack by the African
police upon criminals - no quarter given. But like the
progressing culture of armed robbery in Nigeria, which
has prompted joint police-military operations, the
African police are fighting an unwinnable war, assuming
large social responsibilities that belong more to the
much-hated African politicians than to African police
service: and as in the Nigerian campaigns of war against
crime, atrocities are being committed in both sides.
The African police, like any African group, have a life
of its own that is far more than the sum of the
individuals in it. They belong to different moral order
from the individual. It has sensibilities and impulses
and appetites and mind of its own. It has its collective
will and its personality and its voice and its emotions.
It has its shared values and thoughts that can be
frightening and incomprehensible, like domesticated
species, that may sometimes turn erratically vicious,
doing wild-species things no one could foresee.
In such an African police culture, the ordinary
African's judgment may differ to the collective judgment
in a police group, where individual responsibilities get
diffused, scattered among them. And so when the police
in Ghana or Nigeria decide how to contain youth
demonstrations or growing armed robbery, normal inner
standards give way to group will. The policeman becomes
less self-focused. It will take a strong, poised
character of a policeman to go against current of group
will. Those koti, as the police are called in Ghana, who
confront deadly armed robbers in Accra allow themselves
to go with current of their police tribe, against their
individual inner standards.
The secret of the transformation of the Bawku youth or
any of the others in the riverine areas of Nigeria who
have been clashing with the police over environmental
and oil matters is that a few leaders incite the rest,
tying them, throwing the rope over a palm tree, and they
become a mob. The others automatically allow themselves
to be carried passively by the group purpose. When the
African police encounter demonstrators in Abidjan, it
does this with its own atmosphere and triggers its
tribal antipathies and peer-group expectations.
In such an atmosphere none of the police officers
express objections. And the result can be rough justice
against the enemy – rebels or youth demonstrators or
armed robbers. It is for this reasons that the
overloaded Ghanaian and African need our understanding.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, April 17,
2010, Canada