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Police arrest 29 Arise Ghana demonstrators

Under the sponsorship of Arise Ghana, the demonstration turned violent when protesters pelted the police with stones following a standoff over the route to take

At least 29 demonstrators were arrested on Tuesday (June 28) after clashing with the police in Accra, an official statement said.

Under the sponsorship of Arise Ghana, the demonstration turned violent when protesters pelted the police with stones and various other objects following a standoff over the route to take.

The police fired tear gas to disperse the crowd that was protesting over soaring living costs in Ghana.

“The police have arrested 29 demonstrators for their participation in violent attacks on the police and some members of the public including school children during the Arise Ghana demonstration in Accra,” the police spokesperson, chief superintendent Grace Ansah-Akrofi, said in a statement.

“Available video footages of the event are being reviewed and all other persons identified for taking part in the attacks as well as inciting the violence will be arrested and brought to face justice.

“Also, the organisers of the demonstration will be arrested and put before court for the attacks and damage to public property,” the statement added.

“We would like to assure the public that we remain committed and professionally measured in the discharge of our constitutional mandate of enforcing law and order in the country,” it said.

Below is the full statement:

Earlier, the police said 12 personnel were injured in the clash.

Below is an official statement from the Ghana Police Service:

”What a shame, we were there to protect you and ensure your safety, but you throw stones at us, injure and hurt us,” the Police Service tweeted, sharing pictures of injured personnel.

The two-day Arise Ghana protest is expected to end on Wednesday.

Motivation for the protest

The organisers of the Arise Ghana demonstration have said that the reasons for their action include persistent and astronomical hikes in the cost of fuel.

The organisers maintain that repeated increases in fuel prices have inflicted excruciating hardship and distress on Ghanaians already struggling to cope in a tough economic climate.

They also say they are protesting against the government’s imposition of the Electronic Transfer Levy (E-Levy) on the Ghanaian people, and are demanding a full-scale, bipartisan parliamentary probe into spending of monies for COVID-19 relief.

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