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The Narcotics Control Commission (NACOC) has destroyed 50,000 Kilogrammes or 50 tonnes of marijuana at the Bundase Military Camp in the Greater Accra Region, worth Fifty Million Ghana Cedis (50,000,000).
The two-day destruction exercise is in accordance with the Commission’s law, Act 1019, which requires NACOC to seize, investigate, and prosecute perpetrators, as well as destroy seized narcotic drugs after following all legal procedures.
The Commission is mandated to destroy seized narcotic drugs after conducting all necessary investigations.
Act 1019 Section 108 of the Narcotics Control Commission states that disposal and storage of seized narcotics, controlled equipment, and precursors where the “Court orders the forfeiture of controlled equipment or the destruction of a narcotic drug or plant or precursor, the narcotic drug or plant or precursor shall be disposed of by a method ordered by the Court and the destruction of the narcotic drug or plant.”
It emphasisied further that precursor shall also be carried out in the presence of the representatives specified as “one representative of the court that issued the order; one representative of the Ghana Police Service; one representative of the Commission and one representative of the Prosecution.
One representative of the Environmental Protection Agency; one representative of the Defence Counsel; one representative of the analysts; and one representative of the Media,” it explained.
The NACOC stressed and noted that narcotic drug or plant, precursor or controlled equipment may be tested in court in the course of prosecution and immediately before the destruction or disposal as the case may be.
According to the commission, the seizures mainly were made between the years 2021 and 2023 in the Volta Region and Eastern Region where suspects escaped arrest while their trucks, vans, and cars were impounded at the Commission’s headquarters in Accra.
However, the Commission said, under normal circumstances would have used an insinuator to destroy the cannabis, but due to the huge nature of the drugs, the commission decided to resort to open-air destruction.
“The Commission cautions the general public, particularly drivers, who allow themselves to be used as couriers by smugglers, with or without their knowledge, that their vehicles used in the act will be seized. They must always ensure to check the content of consignments they intend to convey from one destination to another.
Vehicle owners should also ensure to conduct background checks on their employees before handing over their vehicles to avoid having their vehicles seized,” NACOC warned in a statement signed by the Public Affairs and International Relations Department.
The commission was very grateful to the National Security Secretariat, Ghana Armed Forces and our international partners for their support in the destruction exercise.