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Media assault: Rethinking the strategy beyond the public condemnation and theatrics

The Ghana Journal­ists Association issued an ultima­tum to the Ghana Police Service to take punitive action against some persons including a senior police officer who attacked some journalists during the Able­kuma North Constituency rerun in Accra or face a total media blackout or boycott. The Associa­tion has also taken a bold decision to petition the diplomatic com­munity on the development and submit names of security person­nel involved in these attacks for the purpose of denying them visas and peacekeeping opportunities.

While I commend leadership for taking such a bold decision, I am tempted to pause and reflect over the decision to engage in a public tango with the Ghana Police Ser­vice especially at a time we ought to be more diplomatic in resolving the issues.

I dare say that, if we do not handle this issue tactfully, we may end up surrendering journalists covering the Akwatia By-election to danger.

Blackout of police event?

Will it be effective?

Let me acknowledge that, boycott is a major tool at our disposal, however, it may not work entirely with the Ghana Police Service. This is an institution which prevented all of its officers from talking to the media except the Inspector General of Police and an assigned senior officer in charge of Communication. This is an institution with a free to air television channel and active social media handles for the dissemina­tion of information to it public. Our blackout may not be biting enough.

In actual fact, even though the Ghana Police Service needs the Ghanaian media, the media needs them most, especially in crime re­porting. The difficulty is that, most practicing journalists are not even members of the GJA, ensuring compliance would be a challenge. We have to rethink the strategy.

Will the boycott

enhance security of

journalists covering the

Akwatia by-election?

Obviously we cannot say yes if we continue to tango with the police. What if the police decide to also stay away from any incidentals involving journalists covering the Akwatia by-election? We must be tactful in our proactivity. I have covered several by-elections in Ghana and followed same.

The Akwatia Security Calculus: Lessons from Personal Experience

Our current adversarial posture with the Ghana Police Service poses existential risks to the safety of journalists during the Septem­ber 2, 2025 Akwatia by-election. This election, necessitated by the death of MP Ernest Kumi on July 7, 2025, carries particular volatility given the constituency’s electoral history.

Having personally covered the contentious 2009 Akwatia re-run election—the very contest that brought Baba Jamal to Parlia­ment—I witnessed firsthand the dangerous dynamics that emerge when political tensions intersect with inadequate security coordi­nation. That election required a re-run in six polling stations on August 18, 2009, and the atmo­sphere was charged with allega­tions, counter-allegations, and heightened partisan emotions.

During that coverage, I observed how quickly situations can deteri­orate when security protocols are unclear or poorly coordinated. The presence of unofficial taskforces, unidentified security operatives, and inadequate Journalists protec­tion mechanisms created an envi­ronment where media personnel became vulnerable to intimidation and potential assault. The lessons from that experience are stark: when emotions run high and secu­rity arrangements are ambiguous, journalists become easy targets.

If we continue our confronta­tional approach with the Ghana Police Service, we risk creating a security vacuum precisely when our colleagues need protection most.

What should the GJA do

immediately?

I believe in diplomacy but I also trust that diplomatic radicalism is allowed in some instances. The Ghana Journalists Association must:

1. Meet with the IGP and his team to discuss how to protect journalists covering the Akwatia by-election. (if that is not done yet)

2. Sign a pact with the Gha­na Police Service to ensure that no journalist is assaulted, or intimidat­ed at Akwatia.

3. Agree with the Ghana Police Service as the head of elec­tion security taskforce to ensure that, only uniformed men with name tags are allowed to provide security at Akwatia before, during and after the by-election

4. Encourage the police to prohibit all forms of taskforce/ thugs parading and patrolling in groups either in vehicle or by foot at Akwatia

5. Ensure that journalists move in groups and if possible in a company of a uniformed police­men attached to the group. This can be done by zoning the con­stituency and ensuring that, each electoral area is headed by a senior police officer as IN-CHARGE of security. The IN-CHARGE would be responsible for the security of journalists in his jurisdiction and would be the first contact for the safety of journalists.

Pacta sunt servanda. This pact when signed with mutual respect becomes a working document and would be binding on the parties.

What about the perpetrators of the Ablekuma violence and Carlos Calony’s culprit?

1. The GJA should inves­tigate and identify the officers involved by now if it has not been done.

2. The GJA should present the facts of the case to our legal team (if any) and seek advice

3. The names of all officers involved in the attacks must be published in the print and elec­tronic media and online portals to serve as concrete evidence to the world.

4. The option of petitioning the diplomatic communities and embassies must be explored with the names of the officers involved.

The writer is the immediate past Eastern Regional Chairman of  the GJA

BY MAXWELL KUDEKOR

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