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Regional News of Wednesday, 8 December 2021

    

Source: crimecheckghana.org

CCF facilitates release of seized goods to poor single mother

Comfort Asiamah, Hawker Comfort Asiamah, Hawker

Crime Check Foundation has facilitated the release of seized human hair weaves (weave-on) belonging to hawker Comfort Asiamah.

The hair weaves of the poor single mother were confiscated by the Ashaiman Municipal Assembly Task Force.

Worried Ms. Asiamah narrated her story to a CCF monitoring team during one of its routine monitoring on effects of the bye-laws of Ashaiman Municipal Assembly on vagrants and other poor persons as part of the implementation of CCF-OSIWA “Decriminalizing Vagrancy Laws and Advocacy” project on Monday, 6th December 2021.

According to Comfort, she was selling the products within the central business area of Ashaiman when a lady bought some of the products in front of a bank and gave her One Hundred Ghana cedis.

Comfort said because she did not have a change, she left the goods with the customer while she went to change the money into smaller denominations.

The poor hawker narrated that when she returned, the customer told her that the Municipal Assembly Task Force had taken her goods away.

The distressed lady then went to the office of the Task Force where she was asked to pay a fine of One hundred Ghana cedis because she was “selling at an unauthorized area”.

Ms. Asiamah, said, she could not afford the fine since she had not made enough sales and she had actually credited the products to enable her to fend for her little child, but the Task Force was not convinced.

She complained to the CCF monitoring team who led her to the office of the Task Force. The team consisted of the Project Manager for CCF, Cosmos Akorli, and a Community Monitoring Team member for the Municipality, Mr. Emmanuel Agbevenu who is also a Unit Committee Member in the area.

Cosmos and Emmanuel pleaded with the head of the Task Force, Mr. Abu to release the goods to the poor lady since she could not pay the fine due to her level of deprivation.

They emphasized that Ms. Asiamah is just one of the many women who are facing the effects of extreme inequality, vulnerability, and exclusion due to poverty, and lack of education.

The team added that “Comfort lacked knowledge of the Assembly bye-laws”, an issue the Municipal Prosecutor mentioned to the CCF team in an earlier meeting on, same day. Thankfully after some deliberations with the Assembly, the head of the Task Force ordered the release of the goods to Comfort, though reluctantly.

In an interview with Comfort after she retrieved her goods, she expressed gratitude to CCF and OSIWA for ensuring the release of her confiscated goods. She noted that her “main worry when the goods were seized was how she would be able to raise some money for her child a few days to Christmas”.