General News of Saturday, 14 April 2012

Source: peacefmonline

If NDC Wants Me Transfered, I'm Ready To Go - Awuni

The head of the Motor Transport and Traffic Unit, ACP Angwubutoge Awuni has boldly stated that he is ready to be transferred from the Greater Accra region to any part of the country as demanded by the Greater Accra branch of the National Democratic Congress (NDC).

Mr. Ade Coker, Chairman of the Greater Accra branch of the NDC on Friday demanded the transfer of the MTTU boss for allegedly manhandling the former Greater Accra regional Minister and Member of Parliament for Korle-Klottey, Hon. Nii Armah Ashittey.

Hon. Nii Armah Ashittey was briefly arrested and detained for allegedly interfering in the ongoing biometric registration exercise in his constituency last Thursday.

Mr. Ade Coker, in an interview with XYZ News stated that ACP Awuni acted unprofessionally and must be transferred from the Greater Accra region with immediate effect.

However, reacting to the demands by the Greater Accra branch of the NDC, ACP Awuni in an exclusive interview with XYZ News said he is not perturbed by the call for his transfer and is willing to move to any part of the country once the IGP directs him to do so.

He said “they should transfer me, I think that I am not going to Burkina Faso otherwise I will still be a Ghanaian Police officer and I will continue to do my work as a professional police officer. I work under an authority and a disciplined institution so I am waiting for the the IGP to tell me to go on transfer”.

ACP Awuni however expressed shock at the twist of events saying Mr. Armah Ashittey has proved not to be credible after he stated on another media house that he was not arrested and manhandled.

He also denied accusations of acting unprofessionally, adding that Mr. Armah Ashittey would not have been detained if he had obeyed orders and left the polling station when he was asked to do so politely.

ACP Angwubutoge also debunked the violence that has characterised the biometric registration exercise stating that this is not good for Ghana’s reputation.

“I think it is a bad thing for our democracy. Violence should not accompany our democracy. We have made a mark as far as democratic [rule] is concerned in this continent. We must perpetuate the good record that we have chalked.”

He said if law and order is allowed to prevail, many of the problems faced by police personnel will be a thing of the past.

He said when police men feel that they would be victimized for standing up to uphold the law, there is the likelihood that they will be unprofessional.

“What do you expect from policemen who think that they will be victimized if they act professionally? I have done what a policeman should do and I would do what a policeman should do.”