The Inspector General of Police, James Oppong-Boanuh, has directed the deployment of armed police officers to provide escort services for tomato traders and transporters who travel to neighbouring Burkina Faso to import the commodity.
This comes after the Tomato Traders and Transporters Association declared a strike because of lack of concern for the security of its members.
It had complained of attacks on its members by robbers on the Ghana-Burkina Faso highway.
There were fears the strike could lead to a tomato shortage.
The association said seven of its members had been robbed and shot in less than three weeks while returning from Burkina Faso with tomatoes.
Two of them died following the attacks forcing traders and transporters to embark on a strike over security concerns.
The Deputy Ashanti Regional Police Commander, DCOP David Agyeman Adjem, who met the traders on behalf of the IGP, assured of the police’s support.
“The IGP sent me through the Regional Commander to give them a message…the IGP wanted me to assure them that he had already had some men deployed on that highway and that we should also give them escorts as they went on the highway.”
DSP Adjem also said the police was exploring possible military support for the police escorting the tomato trucks.
The leadership of the association welcomed the intervention and said it would meet to decide on when to call off the strike.
“I am very happy today because the rate at which they were robbing us was very unprecedented,” Eric Osei Tuffour, National Chairman of the Association, said.
He added that following a meeting with the police in the next two or three days, “the escort will take off, and then we will call off the strike action.”
– Citibusiness