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According to James Harry Obeng, the soldiers forced him to weed for an hour before releasing him.
A man who claimed to have been forced by two soldiers from Michelle's camp to weed as punishment has petitioned the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ).
James Harry Obeng, a journalist, was allegedly ill-treated Wednesday by the two soldiers at Michelle Camp for "not committing any offense".
He stated that he initially complained to the Mataheko police station, but that the police had advised him to report the case to CHRAJ.
Mr. Obeng said the soldiers, whose name he gave Owusu and Mensah, had weeded for an hour before releasing him.
Once contacted, a plaintiffs unit official, CHRAJ, pleaded for anonymity, confirmed the story and indicated that three board directors would review the case and determine if the board had the mandate to conduct investigations Ghanaian weather reported.
Mr Obeng said that he had joined a bus 207 to Afienya and headed to Accra on Wednesday.
He said by approaching from a junction called Mateheko Number 1, the bus driver took a pbadenger.
Mr. Obeng stated that some drivers at the Matehoko Crossroads Number 1 were trying to create a commercial transportation (trotro-taxi station) and that every time another driver on the Tema / Ashaiman-Afienya road was carrying a pbadenger to at this junction or nearby, these drivers chased that driver.
He stated that as a daily driver of the road, he pointed out that attempts by Mataheko drivers to drive the offending driver (s) often resulted in heated clashes.
"In my case, the driver, after choosing the pbadenger, entered the track of the cars (Tema / Ashaiman-Afienya) that came, instead of staying on the track (Afienya-Tema / Ashaiman). I think his intention was to avoid any confrontation with the drivers of the Mateheko Number 1 junction.
Nevertheless, immediately after having bypbaded this intersection, he joined the appropriate path (Afienya-Tema / Ashaiman) and got out of the way of the cars coming in the opposite direction, "he added.
Arriving at the main gate of Camp Michel, Mr. Obeng said that the drivers of Mataheko, boarded a blue bus 207 and speeding on the track of the nearby cars, came and "crossed" my car right in front of the main gate of camp Michel ".
He added that the drivers then questioned the driver of the vehicle he was traveling on (Mr. Obeng), which ultimately resulted in a traffic jam.
Then the soldiers guarding Camp Michel's door went to the scene apparently to restore order.
At that time, he said, "All the pbadengers in the car I was in, including myself, were coming down to take another car to continue on our way to Accra and I immediately got out of the car. , a soldier (with Owusu on his uniform) asked that I explain to him what had caused the confrontation between the two buses, from my pbadenger point of view.
"Then we (the soldier and myself) left the road to get to the side of the road (right in front of Camp Michel's door) and started to tell what I saw. Then he (the soldier) cut into my explanation that I should follow him inside the door to continue my story. I forced him and followed him, and then finished telling him the story.
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