The display of bravery and heroism by a senior policewoman in rescuing and bringing back to Ghana a nine-year-old boy abducted to Nigeria has earned her an international award.
The US State Department named DSP Patience Quaye among eight persons selected world-wide as "Heroes and Heroines Acting to End Modern-day Slavery".
This was contained in the June 2007 release of the Department's annual Trafficking in Persons Report.
According to the report, the extraordinary efforts of DSP Quaye (nee Boi-Bi-Boi), who pursued and helped to prosecute a man, Razak Mohammed, who abducted and sold his stepson to strangers in Nigeria, enforced a new law in Ghana to combat human trafficking.
The report said in December 2005, one Razak Mohammed asked his wife, Joyce Kruwaa, to allow his stepson, Kwadwo Kwafo, aged nine, to accompany him to visit his parents at Kintampo in the Brong Ahafo Region.
She gave her consent because that had been the usual practice whereby every December, Mohammed went to his parents for items for the Christmas celebration.
The report said this time around, instead of going to Kintampo, Mohammed took the boy to Kano, Nigeria, and sold him to an Alhaji for 158,000 naira (about $1,000).
The report said DSP Quaye, who is also the Deputy Director of Interpol, Ghana, led a team from Ghana to Abuja, Nigeria, where the abducted boy was found in the custody of the National Agency for Prohibition of Trafficked Persons and Other Related Matters (NAPTIP).
The team brought the boy back to Ghana on June 7, 2006 and handed him over to his mother, Joyce Kruwaa.
After negotiation with the NAPTIP through the Ghana High Commission in Abuja, Mohammed was handed over to Interpol Ghana on February 16, 2007.
On February 20, 2007, Mohammed was arraigned, tried, convicted and sentenced to six years in jail with hard labour.
Presenting the award to her at an impressive ceremony at the American Embassy in Accra, Mrs Pamela E. Bridgwater, the American Ambassador to Ghana, said Mrs Quaye was selected because of her personal commitment and accomplishments and this was a credit to Ghana and its effort to combat trafficking in the country.
She explained that all American embassies in the world were asked to nominate one person who had made a significant contribution in combating trafficking in persons and DSP Quaye was selected for her efforts in returning the child to his mother and helping to prosecute the abductor.
She said the sentence of the trafficker made it the first successful prosecution of a human trafficking case in Ghana since the passage of the Human Trafficking Law in 2005.
The Ambassador said all this was accomplished at a time the Human Trafficking Board, a body that is mandated by the Trafficking Law to regulate and oversee prosecution, had not been set up.
"Her achievement was truly inspiring and I am so pleased that she was getting international recognition from the State Department," Mrs Bridgewater said.
For her part, DSP Quaye said human trafficking and smuggling of migrants constituted a global disease which posed a great challenge to Ghana, the ECOWAS sub-region and the international community as a whole.
She, therefore, called for a multi-faceted approach to combating the menace.
According to her, the Interpol Human Trafficking Desk in Ghana was opened barely three years ago as a result of a resolution passed during an Interpol conference held in Lyon, France.
DSP Quaye said the desk had handled a lot of cases both internally and externally but one outstanding case which brought great success to the unit and smiles on the faces of Ghanaians was the Razak Mohammed case.
Source: The Mirror
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
‘Yes, I voted for myself!’ – Cheddar addresses election rumors, calls for electoral reforms
7 minutes -
Akufo-Addo approves visa-free entry to Ghana for all African nationals
10 minutes -
Let us reflect, refocus and rebuild our party – Kwaku Appiah urges NPP members
24 minutes -
24-year-old unemployed remanded for unlawful entry, stealing
25 minutes -
I will deliver on my promises - Ashaiman MP
26 minutes -
IPR Ghana congratulates President-elect Mahama
27 minutes -
BoG Governor warns of cyber threats, urges investment in security
28 minutes -
Ensure safety on roads this festive season – Drivers, road users urged
29 minutes -
Those calling for our removal don’t understand our responsibilities – Bossman Asare
31 minutes -
Use ex-gratia funds to resource education – CAPCOE to Mahama
34 minutes -
NDC candidate calls for judicial independence amid election disruptions
38 minutes -
Fire destroys 5 containers at Saglemi Affordable Housing Project site
41 minutes -
Armed robbery gang in Akatsi South jailed 125 years
46 minutes -
Ghana’s path to greatness is clear, says Akufo-Addo
50 minutes -
Mahama reaffirms commitment to creating a nation that works for all in Christmas message
55 minutes