Crime

Lt Gen Arnold Quainoo (rtd) is dead

 A Former Ghanaian military officer, Lieu­tenant General (Lt Gen) Arnold Quainoo (rtd), has passed on at the 37 Military Hospital on  Monday.

He served as the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) from August, 1983, to September, 1989.

 Lt Gen Quainoo (rtd) was CDS during the era of the late Flight Lieutenant Jerry John Rawlings, who was Ghana’s Head of State, under the Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC), from 1982 to January 6, 1993, and later President of Ghana from January 7, 1993, to January 6, 2001.

Lt Gen Quainoo later handed over as CDS to Lt Gen Winston Mensa-Wood.

The passing of Lt Quainoo marks the end of an era in Ghana and West African military and political history.

His tenure coincided with one of the most politically turbulent periods in Ghana’s history, charac­terised by coup d’états, economic challenges, and military reforms.

Lt Gen Quainoo also served

 twice as Army Commander, first in 1979, following the coup d’état by the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC), which overthrew the Supreme Military Council (SMC) that was led by Lt Gen Frederick William Kwasi Akuffo.

He was replaced as Army Com­mander, when the Hilla Limann government was elected in 1979.

Lt Gen Quainoo was, however, re-appointed as Chief of Army Staff, following the coup by the PNDC that overthrew the People’s National Party, and later as General Officer Commanding the GAF.

Lt Gen Quainoo (rtd), com­monly referred to as ‘Buffalo Soldier,’ was the first commander of the Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group (ECOMOG), in 1990, which intervened to help end the Liberian civil war.

His time in Liberia became shrouded in controversy following the tragic capture and execution of President Samuel Kanyon Doe on September 9, 1990, at ECOMOG headquarters.

Critics alleged that Quainoo, as force commander, had failed to protect the Liberian president, resulting in Prince Johnson’s men killing Doe.

In 2014, Lt Gen Quainoo (rtd) denied any responsibility for the death of Doe, asserting that the plot to kill Doe was orchestrated without his knowledge.

The former Ghanaian military officer also laid responsibility on Doe, citing his refusal to heed warnings and accept asylum ar­rangements that might have saved his life.

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