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POLICE IN GHANA, THE ISSUES, THE FUTURE
Samuel Dowuon
a, Ghanadot


Accra, May 13, Ghanadot - So much has been said about the good old Ghana Police Service (GPS), most of it unfortunately negative. But to think that a learned (law) lecturer at Ghana’s premier university could boldly tell the eminent police council and hierarchy in the face that they need to be humble and learn policing skills from illegal vigilante groups, “landgaurds” and from the private security agencies was something most interesting.

What’s more, another governance and security expert also described the police hierachy as “heavy”! The GPS hierarchy is made up of 34 Director-Generals! He argued that they hold their heavy positions in futility because they do not have clear cut assignments commensurate with those heavy positions; to him and many others like himself, “there is no police service in Ghana”.
The two bold men, who dared the hierarchy of the GPS and the Police Council are the soft spoken but punchy Dr. Raymond Atuguba, a law lecturer at the University of Ghana, Legon and Co-Chair of the Board of Legal Resources Centre and Dr. Emmanuel Kwesi Aning, Head, Conflict Prevention Management and Resolution Department (CPMRD) of the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC) in Accra. Dr. Aning stummers though, but is known for his cutting edge, unambigous statements on issues of national interest, especially national security.

Harsh as these statements by those two experts may be, they clearly indicate that, as it has always been in the past and still is in Ghana’s Golden Jubilee year, public confidence in the GPS is nothing to write home about and the people feel less protected in their communities. That is the kind of Ghana Police Service at 50 that Ghanaians have to live with.

As both men suggested during the National Jubilee Lectures on Policing in Ghana, jointly organized by Nana Oye Lithur’s Commonwealth Human Right Initiative (CHRI) and the GPS itself, on one hand the advent of private security agencies (PSAs), illegal community vigilante groups (CVG) and the dreaded land guards (LG) clearly indicates that the work of policing have outgrown the GPS by far looking at the constant lapses associated with their work today.

On the other hand, the rank and file of the GPS itself seems to have misplaced priorities as far as what the core of policing is all about. As both men unequivocally suggested, policing is first of all about community safety and not about crime prevention per se; chasing after drug dealers, interfering with school campus, chieftaincy and political affairs and responding to calls from politicians and people in high places to effect the arrest of usually ‘innocent’ citizens.

Dr. Aning asked the police “who is your client?” and continued “because as a citizen of Ghana I do not feel I am your client.” If the citizens do not feel that the GPS is there for their good then indeed there is some credence to the thinking that GPS does not exist.

In support of Dr. Aning assertion, Dr. Atuguba condemned what he called the submission of the police to politicians, foreign security operatives and to big businesses like banks and what he called their acceding to rich individuals who support the Service with cars, money and other logistics, at the expense of the larger public.

In other words the police over concentrate their attention on the elite minority of society whiles the larger majority are left at the mercy of criminals, some of whom the police themselves have been accused and found to assist in their criminal activities.

Dr. Atuguba argued that crime prevention is a means to an end and that end is to ensure that community safety - that individual citizens should feel safe and protected by the police.

“ But besides working as bribe-taking traffic wardens, providing security at banks and for politicians, the GPS seem to concentrate more on the secondary role and forget about the actual reason for which they perform that role in the first place,” Dr Atuguba explained.

Both men pointed out that constitutionally, it is the right of the people to find ways of ensuring their security and if the GPS has failed to do that then the people are within their rights to buy security services from any group who purport to provide it, be they legal institutions like the PSAs and neighbourhood watchdogs or illegal groups like the vigilante groups and “landguards”.

Whilst most of the punches were thrown in the direction of the Police Service, Dr Atuguba pointed out that policing is not just an institution but a core good governance issue and therefore the ball is really in the court of government to ensure effective policing by adequately resourcing them with equipment, well trained human capacity and best of all service and community safety oriented personnel.

But there is a history to the current state of the GPS. According to Atuguba whilst the Police Service is only 50 years, policing in Ghana as an institution is 178 years old. He stated categorically that the GPS is what it is now because since 1829 when official policing was instituted in Ghana, there has not been any radical reforms; radical in the sense of reforms from the roots.

However in the late 1940s the British Colonialists in the then Gold Coast reformed the Gold Coast police with an orientation to harass and intimidate Ghanaian citizens who dared the colonial regime at the time. Since that reform, which turned the Gold Coast police into a force (Gold Coast Police Force) rather than a service, the police in this country has known no other way of policing than harassing and intimidating civilians instead of protecting and assisting them.

The chequered political history of post-Gold Coast Ghana, characterized by at six military regimes led to a complete relegation of the GPS to the background and as Dr. Aning put it, in the mid-1980s, Ghana’s public sector as a whole underwent institutional reforms to re-orient them and to improve their delivery capacity and effectiveness, but the security service, including the Poilce were conspicuously left out of that restructuring process.

As a result, the GPS, like the Gold Coast Police Force, is only very popular for acting in response to calls by the elite in society to put the fear of God in ordinary citizens! Recent examples of civilian intimidation and harassment by the GPS are the unfortunate incidences on the University of Ghana Campuses (the infamous in-out-out-out policy) where the University administration rampantly invites the police to frustrate students and the infamous tear gas shooting incident at Takoradi Polytechnic.

I am told that in less than a year the University of Ghana administration has used the police uncountable number of times to settle scores between them (the administration) and students. No one can forget the May 9th incident at the Accra (Ohene Gyan) Sport Stadium, where due to the poor Police crowd management skills at 126 lives were lost.

Obviously the future for the GPS is reforms and according to the two experts the reform should gear toward community policing, which they also describe as democratic policing. But as both lecturers, Aning and Atuguba submitted, the GPS is the most studied institution in Ghana and more reports have been written on the GPS than on any other institution in Ghana and yet there seem to be an internal effort within the GPS to sabotage any attempts to reform it!

Whilst calls have often gone to government to increase the numbers of the GPS staff and to provide it with all the necessary equipment for effective policing, it is also true that till date government annual budgetary allocation to GPS remain shrouded in secrecy and since 1992 the GPS has failed to submit its annual reports to Parliament for scrutiny as required by the constitution

This makes it difficult for the public and experts to actually assess what kind of reform the GPS needs.

Available statistics indicate that GPS has only 17,000 officers and men and that means the police civilian ratio in Ghana is 1: 1,178, which is more than twice the United Nations requirement of 1:500.

Whilst Aning thinks the GPS needs more staff to make community or democratic policing work, Atuguba thinks the numbers should even be cut down to ensure that the police involved the people in the communities themselves in the whole process of policing. That is the rationale for Atuguba’s challenge to the police hierarchy to humble themselves and learn from the community based security (policing) groups.

The examples of other jurisdictions like UK and the US, where the state police are more than adequately resourced to perform their duties, clearly shows that policing has gone beyond just a state institution to the involvement of entire communities. The Sheriff system and even the system where civilians are trained by the state machinery to provide policing are working effectively in these places and it would not be a bad idea to pick a few lessons from them.

The Ghana Police Administration over the last 50 years has moved from the idea of just being ordered around to fine trained and educated gentlemen who actually think their way through. But to the extent that issues of logistics, training, attitude and adjustment to the changing trends are problematic and even beyond the budgets submitted each year, the expectations of the Ghana Police will always fall short.

The truth is that the next 50 years would be more arduous, complex and demanding than ever before and the early we all, especially the Executive in government, appreciate what they do and are resourced and under the grill of authority, the better it would be for us all to ensure that we are not only safe, but would not fall prey to them.

Samuel Dowouna, Accra June 13, 2007, Ghanadot



 






 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

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