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General News of Wednesday, 3 July 2019

Source: classfmonline.com

Find Tardi girls - Gifty Anti to Police

Oheneyere Gifty Anti Oheneyere Gifty Anti

The Ghana Police Service must endeavour to find the three girls kidnapped in Takoradi, Western Region, between August and December last year, Oheneyere Gifty Anti has said.

The kidnapped girls are 18-year-old Priscilla Mantebea Koranchie, last seen on 21 December 2018; 21-year-old Priscilla Blessing Bentum, last seen on 17 August 2018; and 18-year-old Ruth Love Quayson, last seen on 4 December 2018.

The TV broadcaster said she trusts that the police will do a good job in that regard to help cleanse the country’s image.

“The Police have to do all they can to find the girls,” she told Kwabena Prah Jnr (The Don) on Accra 100.5FM on Wednesday, 3 July 2019.

She added: “This situation is not easy for the families and the parents of the girls and also creates a bad image for Ghana.”

Government officials have assured the families and the nation that all efforts are being put in place to find the girls.

The Minister for the Interior, Mr Ambrose Dery, told journalists on Wednesday, 20 March 2019, on the sidelines of the annual review of his ministry’s 2018 activities that the country’s laws on privacy are hindering progress in finding the girls.

“The police are on top of the matter”, he said, adding: “It will come to a time that, as a country, we take some decisions as to what we want – our privacy. We should be able to use technology to track where a person is calling from, but are we prepared to give up our privacy?”

“Then we can listen in to some of the conversations that will help us arrest the culprits.

“As a nation, while we are working hard at this, we are bringing in whatever support we can get from outside because we are talking about our girls.

“They are the future. Yes, it is a very painful exercise for us. We are very hopeful that none of them has been killed,” he said.

The families of the girls have threatened to sue the Ghana Police Service over the delay in finding the victims and also picket the Jubilee House.

The man suspected to be behind the kidnappings, Samuel Udoetuk-Wills, a Nigerian, broke cell and escaped from the custody of the Takoradi Metropolitan Police Command on 30 December 2018, but was re-arrested by the police. He is currently serving a jail term for that offence.