According to Ghana news online, The Tumu police last
Saturday night arrested four suspected armed robbers who trailed the convoy of
the presidential candidate of the People’s National Convention (PNC), Mr Hassan
Ayariga.
The four, who were using a Mitsubishi Pajero vehicle
with registration number GR 8849 R, had in their vehicle a fully loaded pump
action gun and 10 cartridges.
Other items found in the car were, two screw
drivers, GH¢1,170 cash, dried leaves suspected to be Indian hemp, pictures, a
Ghanaian passport belonging to one of the suspects, six mobile phones, a laptop
and bank leaflets.
The suspects, who are currently in the custody of
the police, have been identified as Bawimuah Dajan, Sambo Fulani, Akwasi Mensah
and Paul Michael. Continue after the cut:
The incident happened at about 9 p.m. near the
Kanton Senior High School on the road leading to Bolgatanga when Mr Ayariga and
his family were relocating to another hotel after arriving from Accra.
In the PNC’s flag bearer’s vehicle, which was
closely followed by the suspects’ vehicle, were his wife, Anita, mother-in-law
and his two children, who have been on the campaign trail in northern Ghana.
Ahead of the flag bearer’s vehicle was a PNC-branded
pick-up conveying the Vice-Chairman of the party, David Niibi.
The Tumu District Police Commander, ASP Douglas
Asaana Awumbila, who confirmed the arrests, said the police were on duty when
they received a distressed call that armed robbers were trailing the flag
bearer of the PNC.
Police personnel, he said, were quickly dispatched
to keep surveillance after which the suspects were picked up at a drinking
spot.
Preliminary investigations, he said, showed that
three of the suspects – Mensah, Dajan and Michael – came from Accra to join
Sambo to carry out the exercise.
Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Awumbila
said upon a search in the vehicle the gun and the other items were found.
Sniper Aikins, one of the drivers of the PNC flag
bearer, told the Daily Graphic that shortly after Mr Ayariga was relocating to
another hotel off the Bolgatanga road, the suspects followed up thinking he was
on his way to Bolgatanga for them to attack.
He said he was alerted by someone in the previously
booked hotel to follow up in the convoy of the flag bearer, since a vehicle
suspected to be carrying the robbers were following the flag bearer’s convoy.
“As soon as I set off I decided to put the siren in
my vehicle on.
Their vehicle was at top speed immediately following
Mr Ayariga’s and as soon as they heard the siren they did a swift u-turn
thinking it was the police following them.
“After turning and realising it was a PNC-branded
vehicle they got angry and questioned why I should use a siren when I was not a
policeman. After that I saw them returning to the direction the convoy came
from,” he said.
Mr Aikins said it was then that the police were
alerted and a search was mounted for them.
He said the police search party spotted the vehicle
parked at a bar with the suspects drinking but were arrested after they swiftly
moved into their vehicle to escape arrest by the approaching police team.
Their vehicle was then taken to the Tumu Police Station
where the search revealed the gun and the other items.
For his part, Mr Iddrisu Malcom Forsyth, driver of
Mr Ayariga’s vehicle, said the suspects were sitting at the lobby of the hotel
previously booked for Mr Ayariga.
One of the suspects, Dajan, told the Daily Graphic
that they were neither trailing Mr Ayariga nor were they armed robbers.
He said he was a businessman, and that he used the
gun to protect himself.
Reacting to the issue, Mr Ayariga said it was divine
intervention that saved him and his family.
He said although he was supposed to be allocated
four police personnel, he did not understand why up to date those personnel had
not been sent.
“This is through
God’s intervention and I think God is on our side,” he said.
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