Friday, December 12, 2014

VIDEO: Ex-Convict Calls On Gov't To Immediately Extradite Nigerian In-Mates

Ex-Convict, Christopher Amponsah
Ex-Convict, Christopher Amponsah, popularly known to his in-mates as "Senior Tough" became a free man a couple of weeks ago and has since become the mouthpiece for his mates in prison.

On October 24, 2014, Chris was released from prison after languishing in cells for seven years. 


He has appealed to President John Mahama and his government to extradite Nigerian in-mates for security purposes.

"When you're in prison, you're not imprisoned," Ex-Convict Christopher Amponsah asserted. 

Listen to his submissions below on U TV's Adekye Nsroma




How 

He was a student leader at the time (he had been at every stage of his education) and a desire to MAKE SOME EXTRA CASHbrought him into contact with drug couriers.

His modus operandi was to swallow pellets of drugs and cart them abroad where they were discharged for dealers on standby.

He received some cash in return which he spent on a lavish lifestyle in school.

Boakye Amponsah started off as a construction worker abroad during holidays.

But the money he earned was not enough to support the kind of lavish lifestyle he envisaged and which he saw others enjoy.

Whilst working at Putney Bridge in London, a friend told Amponsah he could make decent money by conveying drugs to the United Kingdom whenever he was travelling on vacation.

It started with meeting "this person who wants to help you turn life around." But the arrangement is such that after that initial meeting, there is no turning back.

Some people had to convey the drugs from Ghana to the UK "so that you are encouraged that everything is fine."

After this, the teacher-turned-drug-courier said his interest in the 'business' grew so arrangements were made for him to travel back to Ghana for his first consignment.

"In our case we always did the swallowing. As a gentleman, you wouldn't find me carrying things...and the people who did the packaging made it nicely; they wouldn't risk your life because it is teamwork, if I'm not there, you are not there."

Amponsah said he swallowed not less than a kilogram of narcotic substances neatly packaged on his first attempt and travelled to the UK.

"The kilo is a weight which can fetch you something worthy," he narrated.

The rules required that "you are not to take food otherwise you will mess yourself up and within those hours if you want to pack yourself with everything (food) you see onboard the plane, then you are going to endanger your own self; you not deliver the quantity you took."

On arrival, he was picked up by a team stationed at the airport by the gang for which he worked and this became the routine for the ensuing years that he engaged in the illicit business.

The first trip fetched him something in the region of 3,000 Pound Sterling even though "I couldn't carry the way it was expected."
After a number of trips spanning years (he wouldn't give exact figures), his days were numbered.

On one fine evening, whilst at the departure lounge at the Kotoka International Airport in Accra, waiting for the announcement for passengers to board flight to Heathrow, security officials snatched his boarding pass as well as his passport from him ordered him to go downstairs.

In fact the announcer had called persons with babies to board the flight and when it was a couple of minutes before the others would join the queue to board the flight, a security official barked,
"gentleman, you are wanted downstairs. I asked who needs me because where I sit I had no cause to go back but these people wouldn't take what I was saying."

Amponsah said he tried to challenge the security officials but it was all useless; they dragged him out of the airport into a vehicle and drove straight to the 37 Military hospital.

Interrogation started even before the arresting party got to the hospital but the ex-convict said he lived his name, Tough, and refused to answer any questions, responding to questions with questions.

"The questions they asked were 'what is in you? What have you taken'? But I can't answer your questions like that. I will tell you to tell me what you think is in me."

He said the security officials took him to the Police Hospital "where the X-Ray was taken before I was landed in the BNI cells, processed to stay there for the night and then the next morning,

Tough is arrested and something is found in his stool."
Tough was put before court and he was still tough, believing that he could escape justice because "you can win a case on technical grounds."

"So we were having vim (confidence) in the court; we went to court that morning well-dressed; people even had powder in their pocket that when the glory comes they pour powder on Tough," he stated.

But that was not to be.

A judge who heard the case sentenced Tough to 10 years' imprisonment.
 
 
Source: Ameyaw Adu Gyamfi/Peacefmonline.com/Ghana
 
 

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