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Stolen UK mobiles end up in Ghana

Mon, 8 May 2006 Source: the Inquirer

MOBILE PHONES nicked in the UK are usually ending up in the Western African country of Ghana, say police. According to the BBC, Ghana has been experiencing a surge in mobile phone use, and apparently it is on the back of hot phones shipped from the UK.

The Beeb quotes Superintendent Eddie Thompson, of the world's only dedicated mobile phone crime unit, based in London, as saying most phones nicked in the UK end up on a slow boat to Ghana. He said they often get switched on briefly at some point and can be tracked.


Ironically, once the phones are sold in that country, they are usually re-stolen. Ghana is also experiencing a wave of mobile phone muggings and thefts. Gangs of young kids on small motorbikes, snatch them from pedestrians or car drivers.


Many of the stolen phones end up in Accra's Tiptoe Lane, known for its second-hand markets and traders of goods of questionable origin.


Ademan, one of the traders, explained that he receives supplies from Finland, and brand new phones from Dubai. On a good day he will sell four phones, on a bad day none.


He said, however, that he does not accept phones to sell unless they are accompanied by a matching charger.


But another trader, Alasan, said that he simply sells phones he is given by his brother, who says they come from Italy.


"I can't know whether they are stolen - I can't know that," he admitted.

But the story of the stolen phone does not end there.


The surge in mobile phone ownership in the country in recent years - some of which has been driven by the availability of stolen European phones - has led to a wave of crime focused solely on snatching the phones from their owners.


Gangs of young boys, usually aged 14-16, ride around the city on "motos" - small motorcycles - targeting people who have handsets in plain sight.


They are often able to snatch them swiftly, and at force, before driving off.


"The bike comes, they go behind the car - the driver didn't even see they were coming - and then they got to the passenger side and snatched the phone with some force," explained one victim.


"Then they sped off, and they were gone.


It came to a level where the police needed to act - and we have acted

Deputy director of police public affairs Kwesi Ofori "It happens a lot - they just snatch your phone, and they are gone."


A former gang leader, Razak, told Global Perspective how easy he had found it to steal the phones.


And if the handset was not clearly visible, they would simply target people's bags which they would usually keep the phone in.


"I was always looking for phones, every time I stepped outside," he said..


"Phones are easier than wallets - and often wallets don't have anything in anyway."


He explained that the reason his gang had stolen was because "we didn't have any education, and our family had no money - nothing."


"But I saw it was a bad life," he added.

This relatively new crime has been working its way up the police priority list in the country.


"It came to a level where the police needed to act - and we have acted," said Accra's deputy director of police public affairs, Kwesi Ofori.


"We have put a lot of resources in. In 2004, there were 209 reported cases - in 2005, 417.


"Our anti-armed robbery unit has taken it very seriously, and has arrested a lot of violent gang members for phone snatching.


"We have reduced phone robbery to a level which is encouraging."


Changing attitudes


Philip Boyfi, one of Ghana's biggest mobile phone retailers, explained that until recently many Ghanaians were not at all careful about concealing their phones.

"They always want to show off the mobile phone they have got," he said.


"All my customers want to be able to scream at the top of their voice that they are on cellphones."


However, following a massive push by the police to educate people of the dangers of using their phone in the street, attitudes are changing.


"You hear of people being threatened at gunpoint for their phone, hit, stabbed with knives," said Fiona Entman, one Accra citizen who lives not far from Tiptoe Lane.


"Now, it is a bit on the low side. Some months ago it was terrible and everyone was scared - some people did not even take their phones to the office, they just left it at home.


"There was a lot of publication on safety with your mobile phone. People are now more alert, and even the people who commit such crimes are more alert, because the police are around."

Source: the Inquirer