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• Incarcerated in 1995, Gemann tells how life was in prison
• Gemann says his time in prison was not a sight to behold
• The musician says the corpse is left unattended on weekends.
Ghanaian pop star Nana Kwasi Agyemang, known as Gemann, recounted some incidents that made her time in prison horrific, one being a claim that corpses had been left in the convicts cell for days.
Gemann was sentenced to death in 1995 after the court found him guilty of murder. He had shot and killed a taxi driver at the Dome in Accra for a taxi fare. Gemann’s friend, Nadia, had hired the driver’s services as he drove her to her [Gemann] to house.
According to Gemann, the driver contradicted the friend and refused to accept a sum of 3,000 cedis (now 3pesewas), insisting that they had agreed on 4,000 cedis (now 4pesewas). The driver left without the money but returned to fetch a piece of sand from the house amid threats, a move Gemann could not imagine.
Furious at the action, Gemann entered his room, picked up a pistol, chased the cab driver, and fired warning shots. After getting hold of the driver, an altercation ensued resulting in the driver’s death. Although the court found him guilty, Gemann insists he accidentally pulled the trigger.
Gemann spent years in Nsawam Prison before receiving a presidential pardon from John Agyekum Kuffour on January 9, 2009.
Today pastor, Gemann, in an interview with Christian Agyei Frimpong on Onua TV’s Anigye Mmere, revealed that the prison experience is horrific.
According to him, inmates had no choice but to sleep in the cell for convicts with dead bodies on weekends if a colleague died on a Friday.
“If a prisoner dies, a police officer has to take his fingerprints for verification. When someone dies, the corpse is placed in the condemned cell. If the person dies on Friday and you get the attention of the police, they won’t come looking for the corpse, ”Gemann said.
“What this means is that we will spend the weekend with the corpse. He will be there until Monday. The corpse would decompose and spoil the place. I’ve been through this so many times. I lost count.
He did, however, mention that he was informed that the narrative had changed because “some human rights defenders fought against it”.
In a separate interview with Giovani Caleb on TV3, Gemann said he expressed his desire for changes in Ghana’s prisons.
“The prison is supposed to be a place of reform. So after five / six years of keeping someone in jail, and that person doesn’t reform, so what’s the point? Then that means there is something wrong with the system, ”he noted.
“Nobody cares about the prisoners. So nothing has changed. There are people in there who don’t need to be there, and they are there, ”added Gemann.
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