Accra, Dec. 20, GNA - The National Electoral Security Task
Force (NESTF) on Monday said over 30,000 security personnel
would be deployed to police the 2010 non-partisan District Level
Elections on Tuesday, December 28. "The security deployment is to ensure the maintenance of law and
order, protection of life and property and to deal professionally and
firmly with any breaches of the peace and any implications before,
during and after the polls," Mr Mohammed Alhassan, Deputy
Inspector General of Police, said at the inauguration of the task force
in Accra. "The NESTF is also mandated to adopt strategic and appropriate
security measures to ensure orderliness and safety of electoral
officials, electoral materials and the electorate," he said. NESTF is multi-disciplinary taskforce comprising the Ghana
Armed Forces, Ghana Police Service, Ghana Fire Service, Ghana
Prison Service, Ghana Immigration Service and other security
operatives. The Minister of the Interior, Mr Martin A. B. K. Amidu,
inaugurated the task force. Mr Alhassan, speaking on behalf of the IGP, said the task force
would also monitor and co-ordinate the activities of all sub-
committees established by the National Task Force and liaise with all
competent authorities to marshal all the needed human, material and
financial resources for effective policing. He charged the task force to work as a team to avoid issuance of
conflicting directives which often created loopholes in security
operations. Mr Martin Amidu urged the task force to play its role in the
election within the strict parameters of the law. "No officer deployed for any assignment at any electoral area or
polling station should under any circumstance be seen or perceived to
be championing partisan causes. "You must remain professional and perform your duties in a fair
and firm manner. Security and intelligence have no political party." Mr Amidu who inaugurated the task force reminded security
personnel of their mandate to maintain a secure and stable
environment for legitimate constitutional activities to take place. "It is our responsibility to ensure that the process of deepening
constitutional democracy by getting the people involved in decision-
making is effectively achieved by taking governance to the doorsteps
of the people in an orderly and secure environment. This is the
bottom line of participatory democracy in practical terms," he said. Brigadier-General Joseph Nunoo-Mensah (Rtd), National Security
Adviser, reminded the security officers that 93once in uniform, your
loyalty is to the state; you must remain neutral to ensure peace". "The sub-region is still volatile due to electoral-related
disputes...The District Level Elections therefore should serve as dress
rehearsal for Elections 2012...You must therefore be civil but firm in
dealing with electoral-related violence as your role in policing elections
is vital." Mr Joseph Yieleh-Chireh, Minister of Local Government and
Rural Development, briefed the security personnel on the new Local
Government Act 1967. He said the review of the decentralisation law was meant to re-
energise the concept and make it meaningful to the country's
development agenda. The Minister therefore tasked the security personnel to study the
law, especially the changes and rules governing the conduct of the
District Level Elections.