GIS Returns 12 Burkinabes At Ivorien Border

A team of Immigration officers on surveillance duties in the Western Region have arrested 12 Burkinabes and a Ghanaian at an unapproved entry point at Nzemtenu near Appollenu around the Ivory Coast-Ghana border.

Among them were two women and a two-year-old toddler.

Assistant Inspector, Moses Manford Akakpo, Western Regional Public Affairs Officer of the Ghana Immigration Service, told the GNA that information from the Half Assini Command of GIS indicated that the swiftness of the patrol officers, coupled with the cooperation of some concerned community members, resulted in the arrest of the migrants.

He said the migrants were arrested at different locations within the community, adding that investigations revealed that they were unrelated and therefore had accidentally arrived at the Nzemtenu community almost at the same time.

Assistant Inspector Akakpo said samples of the migrants aged between 17 and 33 years were immediately taken for testing and that they have since been put under quarantine awaiting results, which would eventually inform the next line of action by the Municipal Security Council.

The Public Affairs Officer said a similar operation last Wednesday also yielded the arrest of 11 Ivorian nationals at Berlin another unapproved entry point near the Newtown Border Post.

He said the 11 have subsequently been escorted back to the Ivorian security to return home.

Meanwhile, some 12 other ECOWAS nationals were refused entry at Appollenu entry point around the Ghana -Ivory Coast border.