How BBC reported Ghana’s cocaine saga

cocaine-womanGhana’s NPP Calls For Inquiry After London Cocaine Bust

Ghana’s opposition has called for a parliamentary inquiry into allegations that a suspected cocaine trafficker had access to the presidential lounge at the country’s main airport.

The alleged trafficker was arrested in the UK, while three officials have been charged in Ghana.

The case has gripped Ghanaians, as the opposition and governing party trade accusations of drug-dealing.

West Africa is a major transit-point for smuggling cocaine to Europe.

The BBC’s Sammy Darko in Accra says the alleged cocaine bust has increasingly assumed a political dimension.
Presidential denial

On Tuesday, Dominic Nitiwul – a senior member of the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) – appeared in parliament with three bags of rice, weighing around 13kg (28lbs).

Mr Nitiwul questioned how a similar amount of cocaine could have evaded customs and security officials at Accra’s Kotoka International Airport to reach London’s Heathrow Airport where the alleged trafficker, Nayele Ametefe, was arrested on 9 November.

The government has denied any involvement in what the local media has dubbed “the cocaine scandal”.

President John Mahama has also strongly denied reports that Ms Ametefe was linked to his family.

Three foreign affairs officials have been charged with aiding and abetting Ms Ametefe by allegedly letting her use the airport’s “VVIP lounge”, a reference to the presidential lounge, our correspondent says.

They have been remanded in custody.

Another nine people, including three Lebanese and an Indian national, were arrested on Tuesday in connection with the case, our reporter says.

Mr Nitiwul kept up pressure on the government on Wednesday by calling for a bipartisan parliamentary committee to investigate the conduct of officials.

“How did it become possible for the [alleged] cocaine lady to use the VVIP lounge of Kotoka International Airport? By what arrangement was she [allegedly] able to get the cocaine into the plane without being detected by all the security operatives at the airport?” Mr Nitiwul said, at a press conference.

West Africa has emerged as a busy route for drugs from Latin America and Asia to Europe, with cartels taking advantage of the region’s poverty and weak border controls.

In June 2013, the ex-security chief at the airport, Solomon Adelaquaye, was charged in the US with conspiring to smuggle Afghan heroin to New York.

He was arrested along with two Nigerians and a Colombian following a joint US-Ghanaian investigation, officials said at the time.

-BBC

ABOUT: Nana Kwesi Coomson

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An Entrepreneur, Corporate Social Responsibility, Corporate Communications Executive and Philanthropist. Editor-in-Chief of www.233times.com. A Senior Journalist with Ghanaian Chronicle Newspaper. An alumnus of Adisadel College where he read General Arts. His first degree is in Bachelor of Arts - Political Science (major) and History (minor) from the University of Ghana. He holds MSc in Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and Energy with Public Relations (PR) from the Robert Gordon University in the United Kingdom. He is a 2018 Mandela Washington Fellow who studied at Clark Atlanta University in USA on the Business and Entrepreneurship track.

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