
The Minister for the Interior over the weekend imposed a curfew on Walewale and its surrounding communities in the West Mamprusi Municipality of the North East Region.
The decision followed the advice from the North East Regional Security Council.
A statement issued by the Ministry of Interior and signed by the Minister, Alhaji Muntaka Mohammed Mubarak, said the curfew, enforced by Executive Instrument, would be in effect from 6:00 pm to 6:00 am daily, starting Saturday, February 15, 2025.
The statement also placed a total ban on the possession of fire arms, ammunition, and offensive weapons within Walewale and its surrounding communities.
It also warned that any individual found in possession of such weapons would be arrested and prosecuted according to law.
The statement also reaffirmed government commitment to ensuring peace and security in the region and called for maximum cooperation from all residents to restore stability in the area.
It, however, urged the chiefs, opinion leaders, and the youth groups to exercise restraint in the face of ongoing challenges and seek peaceful, non-violent solutions to conflicts in the area.
Meanwhile, the Member of Parliament (MP) for the Walewale Constituency, Dr Kabiru Tia Mahama, has condemned the government’s decision to impose a curfew on Walewale and its surrounding communities.
He described the act as poor and politically motivated.
Dr Mahama in statement stated that key stakeholders from the area were not consulted before the curfew was announced, stressing that decisions like this would never foster peace.
The MP also said that if the government truly believed a curfew was the right security solution, it should had been extended to other troubled areas like Binduri, Zebilla, and Garu, where travellers had also suffered deadly attacks all in the Upper East Region.
In another development, residents of Walewale have called on the government to as matter of urgency re-consider its decision to impose curfew on the area.
According to the residents, the curfew was not the best way to resolve the current challenges and situations they were facing now.
The members of the community and the leaders in Walewale highlighted that the right approach to dealing with the issue was through dialogue and collaborative efforts to identify constructive solutions that would prioritise the safety and well-being of their communities.
For the past months, Walewale had been noted for attacks on buses and cargo trucks and burning them having a link to the conflicts in Bawku in the Upper East Region.
FROM YAHAYA NUHU
NADAA, WALEWALE