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Mr Cobbinah Anzah (arrowed), grandfather of Ruth Abaka, responding to the media.
Mr Cobbinah Anzah (arrowed), grandfather of Ruth Abaka, responding to the media.

Where from these bones? Families of T’di missing girls question DNA results

The families of three of the four girls at the centre of the Takoradi kidnapping case have objected to the declaration by the police that the skeletal remains found in a cesspit in Takoradi included those of their missing relatives.

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

The acting Inspector General of Police (IGP), Mr James Oppong Boanuh, at a news conference in Accra last Monday, said DNA tests had confirmed that the skeletons retrieved from the backyard of the prime suspect in the kidnapping cases were those of the four ladies.

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

Besides, they demanded the resignation of the Director-General of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service, Mrs Yaa Tiwaa Addo-Danquah; the Minister of the Interior, Mr Ambrose Dery, and the National Security Minister, Mr Albert Kan-Dapaah, accusing them of exhibiting gross incompetence in the handling of the case.

One family accepts

However, the family of the fourth victim, Priscilla Koranchie, accepted the outcome of the police DNA examination and said it would wait for further details.

“Not that I have abandoned the other families but I am currently out of town and I am with them. If anything good comes out, we will all be happy, but for now I have accepted the outcome,” Mr Alexander Koranchie, Priscilla Koranchie’s father, told the Daily Graphic on Tuesday, September 17.

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The press conference

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At a press conference in Accra on Tuesday, the Spokesperson of the three families that rejected the findings, Mr Michael Grant Hayford, said aside from the telephone conversation the families had with the Director-General of the CID, what was known to the public pointed to the fact that the ladies were alive.

He said the CID boss openly stated that she knew where the girls were and that the police would do everything to bring them back.

Family and community members who attended the press conference were dressed in red and black to signify the seriousness they attached to the developments.

Mr Hayford said the posture of the police was not something the three families could trust.

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According to him, the police had told the families that they (the police) would duly inform them about the findings of the DNA tests, “and for them to hold a press conference and call some of the family members on phone to inform them about the outcome is not the best”.

“We were in the house yesterday when, after 7 p.m., the police arrived to inform us that the skeletons found were those of our children. How do we even develop the appetite to eat and even retire to bed with this pain?” he asked.

Mr Hayford said the families had expected the police to bring along a written report detailing the processes and what the findings were, but nothing like that happened.

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He said it was unfortunate that the police did not even consider their plight and just threw the findings at them in the manner they did, saying: “Even if you go to hospital and the doctor demands a laboratory test, a report is given to the patient to present to the doctor for analysis. How come they did not do that?” 

Anger in the communities

At Nkroful, Kansaworodo and Diabene where three of the girls lived, residents were in a state of shock concerning the outcome of the police investigations.

 Some of them, in an angry mood, rained insults at a police patrol team that arrived in the town yesterday morning, continously hooting at the team until it withdrew.

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Our culture

An elderly man, Egya Kojo, told the Daily Graphic: “In our African or Ghanaian diverse culture, there is a way of communicating such  news to family members. Therefore, walking to the premises at night when people had not even had dinner and some had not returned from work was below the belt.”

Ruth Abaka’s grandfather, Mr Cobbinah Anzah, said his wife nearly collapsed when she heard the announcement of the outcome of the DNA tests.

At the residences of the Quaysons and the Bentums, they said the information came at a time some members were about to have their dinner.

“The police entered and just broke the news to us, which is unacceptable,” one of them said.

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