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Ghana - Amnesty International

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GHANA: END IMPUNITY THROUGH UNIVERSAL JURISDICTIONNo Safe Haven Series No. 101178. SPECIAL IMMIGRATION, POLICE ANDPROSECUTOR UNITSSpecial immigration units. <strong>Ghana</strong> does not have a special immigration unit designed to screenpersons suspected of crimes under international law. Such a unit would have a mandate not only toexclude such persons from travel (either when seeking a visa abroad or when arriving at the border),but also to refer their files to police or prosecuting authorities for investigation and, where there issufficient admissible evidence, prosecution. 420 In practice, some screening is conducted by the<strong>Ghana</strong> Police and immigration officers in the <strong>Ghana</strong> Immigration Service. 421 However, noinformation could be obtained from officials documenting the procedures or methods used by thesetwo agencies to screen persons suspected of such crimes or about what steps were taken whenpersons suspected of such crimes applied for a visa abroad or were stopped at the border. Forexample, although authorities indicate that immigration officials may inform the police or make anarrest on their own initiative, 422 it is not known whether police or immigration officials arrestsuspected perpetrators with a view to exclusion, deportation or referral to prosecutors for the purposeof determining whether they should be prosecuted.Special police units. <strong>Ghana</strong> does not have a special police unit, or a joint police and prosecutionunit, with a mandate to investigate and prosecute crimes under international law. However, <strong>Ghana</strong>has established an Anti-Trafficking Unit, a Virtual Crime Analysis Unit and a Commercial CrimeUnit, all of which investigate crimes under national law of international concern (such as humantrafficking, cross-border financial crime and cyber crime) and a Domestic Violence and VictimSupport Unit of the police, which handles domestic and gender-based crimes.Special prosecution units. <strong>Ghana</strong> does not have a special prosecution unit, or a special police andprosecution unit, with a mandate to investigate and prosecute crimes under international law.However, <strong>Ghana</strong> has established an Economic and Organized Crime Office (EOCO), which prosecutesfraud and corruption.420A Refugee Board under the Ministry of Interior performs some of these functions, but only for those seekingasylum. See Refugee Act, 1992 (P.N.D.C.L. 305).421Interview with Assistant Commissioner of Police and Director of Operations, <strong>Ghana</strong> Police Service CriminalInvestigation Department, in Accra, <strong>Ghana</strong> (28 June 2012); Interview with Chief State Attorney, Ministry ofJustice Office of <strong>International</strong> Cooperation, in Accra, <strong>Ghana</strong> (27 June 2012).422Interview with Assistant Commissioner of Police and Director of Operations, <strong>Ghana</strong> Police Service CriminalInvestigation Department, in Accra, <strong>Ghana</strong> (28 June 2012).Index: AFR 28/004/2012 <strong>Amnesty</strong> <strong>International</strong> November 2012

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