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 Prof. Aaron Mike Oquaye (left) in a chat with Rt Rev. Prof. Emmanuel Asante (middle), Chairman, National Peace Council, and Ms Sylvia Lopez-Ekra, UN Resident Coordinator, at the ceremony.
Prof. Aaron Mike Oquaye (left) in a chat with Rt Rev. Prof. Emmanuel Asante (middle), Chairman, National Peace Council, and Ms Sylvia Lopez-Ekra, UN Resident Coordinator, at the ceremony.

Peace Council appeals to families of T’di girls to accept reality

The Chairman of the National Peace Council (NPC), Rt Rev. Prof. Emmanuel Asante, has appealed to the families of the kidnapped Takoradi girls who are now reported dead after a deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) test had been conducted on their remains to accept the reality of the situation.

The girls went missing in the Western Region between July and December 2018.

He said while it was difficult for the families to accept the reality that they had lost their children, it was important to bring closure to the case.

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“We are all praying with them that they will accept the reality and the perpetrators brought to book, so that we will have reason to say that, indeed, justice has been done,” Rt Rev. Prof. Asante told the media on the sidelines of the observance of International Day of Peace in Accra last Friday.

Report

The police last week announced that the skeletal remains of four persons retrieved from two locations in Sekondi-Takoradi in August 2019 had proved to be those of the four Takoradi girls who went missing at various places in the Sekondi-Takoradi metropolis.

Forensic and DNA tests conducted by the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service on the remains confirmed the identities of the skeletons to be those of the missing girls.

While the family of the fourth victim, Priscilla Koranchie, has accepted the outcome of the police DNA examination and said it would wait for further details, the other three families have rejected the report.

The three are the families of Ruth Abakah, Priscilla Bentum and Ruth Love Quayson.

The three families said they could not trust the outcome of the DNA tests, as announced by the police, and, therefore, demanded the reopening of investigations into the case.

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Besides, they demanded the resignation of the Director-General of the CID, Commissioner of Police (COP) Mrs Yaa Tiwaa Addo-Danquah; the

Minister for the Interior, Mr Ambrose Dery, and the National Security Minister, Mr Albert Kan-Dapaah, whom they accused of exhibiting gross incompetence in the handling of the case.

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Calm

However, the NPC Chairman called for calm in order that the situation did not degenerate.

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Given the recent kidnapping cases in the country, including the kidnap of people from Estonia, India and Canada, he urged the public to be vigilant.

“This is the time every individual Ghanaian must be vigilant, in the sense that the miscreants and criminals are hovering around us. We should be mindful of them and report to the police whenever we see suspicious activities around us,” Rt Rev. Prof. Asante said.

Suspects

Currently, two suspects, both Nigerians — Samuel Udeotuk-Wills and John Orji — are in police custody in connection with the kidnapping of the girls.

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A third suspect — Chika John Nnodim — was arrested in Nigeria in August 2019 in connection with the case.
Udeotuk-Wills, who is said to be the mastermind of the crime, was earlier jailed for escaping from lawful custody. He is still facing other charges before a Sekondi High Court.

 

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