Ghana police retrieve arms cache from dealer, businessman

Dakar PANA

PANA

Sunday, February 25, 2001

Ghanaian police said on Sunday that they are investigating separate
cases in which an arms and ammunition dealer and a businessman, were
suspected to have flouted regulations regarding the sale and possession
of weapons.

This followed the retrieval of more than 1,000 assorted guns and a
large quantity of game-bore cartridges from the magazine of Kwame Addo,
an arms dealer, in Accra on Saturday during a joint police-military
swoop.

The weapons include double-barrelled shotguns, guarding guns, pump
action guns and baikal shotguns, Deputy Commissioner of Police Yaw
Adu-Gyimah who led the joint team said on Sunday.

He said at the house of businessman Michael Soussoudis, the team found
15 shotguns, six pistols, a revolver, eight packets of cartridges and
32 pieces of nine-millimetre ammunition. Out of these, three shotguns
and two pistols were unlicensed.

Also found in the house were two bayonets, three binoculars and two day-and-night telescopic sights.

Adu-Gyimah said the team had to carry away all the weapons and ammunition to reconcile with official records.

He said Soussoudis has been granted police bail after submitting a written statement.

Meanwhile, Addo, who was said to have travelled out of the country at
the time of the swoop, was believed to have been opening the magazine
and selling the weapons without recourse to the police, as provided by
the regulations.

According Adu-Gyimah, arms and ammunition dealers are required to
submit a duplicate of keys to their magazines to the police who should
be present each time it is being opened.

This to enables the police to keep track of all arms and ammunition
being released and make sure that only people with no questionable
background acquire them.

He said Addo and Soussoudis, as well as any other person proved to have flouted the laws will be prosecuted.

Soussoudis hit the world headlines in the middle 1980s when he was arrested in the US for spying for Ghana.

His US girlfriend, who was then working in the US embassy in Accra, was
also arrested for passing over information to him.

Soussoudis was swapped with several Ghanaians who were arrested for
spying for the US in a bargain. The Ghanaians were denaturalised and
sent to the US.

Following the expiry of a government moratorium for voluntary
submission of illegal weapons last Monday, the police have launched an
operation to recover arms and ammunition still in unauthorised hands.

"It is going on well. Public co-operation has been very encouraging," Adu-Gyimah said.
	
	

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