Two drivers have been arrested by the youth of Gindabuor, a community on the Sawla-Wa highway in the Savannah region for dealing in fake currencies.
According to victims of their acts, the suspects go to provision shops in the community to usually buy soft drinks worth GH10.00 with the fake GH200.00 note and walk away with the change which is often in the original form.
The youth of Gindabour reportedly arrested the suspects after they went to another shop with the same strategy.
The two culprits were, upon arrest, handed over to the police in Tuna.
Meanwhile, some youth of Gindabour have appealed to the government to get the Sawla District Police Command a vehicle as police in the area usually go for arrests with their private motorbikes.
The Command has indicated that the suspects will be arraigned before the Bole District Magistrate Court soon, the police have assured.
Also read a snippet if my previous post;
The Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) has sanctioned ten evangelists for making noise and preaching on the street without a permit.
According to a news report on the assembly’s website, five other people who used public address systems to sell products in the Central Business District (CBD) met the same fate as the preachers.
The perpetrators are said to have violated the 2017 AMA Abatement of Noise Bye-Law.
“Public Health Officers of the Assembly issued the notices on Friday, July 15, 2022, when they stormed the CBD to enforce the Abatement of Noise Bye-Law,” a report on ama.gov.gh said.
According to the Ghana Standards Protection Requirement for Ambient Noise Control Code GS 122: 2018, the permissible noise level within commercial areas should be 75 decibels (DBS) during the day and 65dbs at night, while areas with residential, trading and light industrial activities should be 60dbs during the day and 65dbs at night.