You are about
to read an awful story of a wasted young genius who recently was “killed” and
“secretly buried” in the Builsa North District of the Upper East Region.
*Early Troubles
Kweku Braimah, aged 15, was born to a poor single
mother, Teini Braimah, at Wiaga-Sinyansa, a village within that district.
Whilst the boy was still under five years, Teini, compelled by a sudden storm
of crushing marital hard times, entrusted his care to her mother and left for
Accra in search of relief for her baby and herself.
Whilst away, her son was weaned on shepherding his
uncle’s flock to the wild hills to graze. He took an obsessive liking to the
field and as a result, even though he started schooling as early as expected,
he was no longer as regular in class as expected. Teini returned to
Wiaga-Sinyansa worried that her son had drifted too early. She shifted him to
Yiisumsa, another village within Wiaga in the district where her husband’s parents
lived, and returned to Accra. That was where the boy grew up.
Kweku, no doubt, was a child prodigy. According to
family sources, he never served any electrical apprenticeship anywhere but he
possessed an overwhelming knack of bringing ‘dead’ electrical devices including
mobile phones back to life naturally on his own.
*A promising
future derailed.
The village did not need a soothsayer to know that the
young technical genius, barring any hindrance and provided he got the needed
backing, was going to become an accomplished electrical engineer. But one huge
obstacle somehow along the line reared its unsightly head to derail the young
genius and, ultimately, to get rid of him. And perhaps, only his mother saw it.
Family sources, after the boy’s cold-blooded death,
revealed to me the Achilles’ heel in the young whiz kid. He was a very honest
child… until, from nowhere, he developed a habit to steal. The habit began
after his mother had left him in the care of his grandparents at Yiisumsa.
He reportedly robbed neighbours in the village mostly
of their monies and portable electrical gadgets. He initially used not to rob
his own mother whenever he travelled to Accra to spend holidays with her until
he allegedly stole one hundred and ten Ghana cedis from her purse, an act he
later confessed to her. Gradually, the rising star became a pathetic
kleptomaniac. And finally, he had to drop out of school because he had grown so
infamous to a point where he felt unfit to remain in the classroom.
Thereafter, reports about his thievery did not cease.
His depressed mother is said to have consulted a pastor in Accra as to why her
son had gone so errant. The boy, the oracle told the woman, was obsessed
because he was possessed. The priest revealed that an old woman in the village,
who had seen the boy’s bright future, spiritually had implanted the habit of
pilfering in him to derail him. He prescribed exorcism and recommended an
exorcist robed in a superior cassock in the parade of ‘God’s Generals’ to help
drive the thieving demon away. She was making that arrangement when the worst
happened.
*The last
torture.
On the morning of Saturday 16th January, 2016, whilst
Teini was in Accra, Kweku was reported to have stolen again. This time he, so
they say, stole a wristwatch that belonged to his paternal uncle, Kweku David
Achantuik, at Yiisumsa. But the boy denied.
The scene of the accusation and denial was soon filled
with a curious crowd. In a bid to extract confession, his uncle purportedly
handed him over to the angry crowd to pound him. Allegedly led by one fire
officer, a mob dragged him through the main market of the area and flogged him
with all kinds of sticks and cables. Those who could not find any objects they
could have used to whip him purportedly jabbed him around the ribs as some
reportedly only accompanied the mob to snap and record the action with their
phones.
It was two hours of torture that left deep cuts on his
whole body with all his fingers dripping with blood. And it is said that the
mob, just to hear what verdict the traditional council would pronounce on the
boy, hauled him before the Chief of Wiaga and his elders. The chief, Nab
Akanfebanyueta Asiuk, reportedly was mad at the mob for taking the law into
their own hands and was more concerned about how the bleeding teenager would be
taken to the nearest health facility first before he might answer to the
accusation leveled against him. The impatient multitude, deaf with rage, did
not listen to the chief.
There is a pillar in the middle of a roundabout that
connects the centre of Wiaga to the roads that lead to the community’s main
market, the health centre and Fumbisi, the capital of the next-door Builsa
South District. The pillar is painted in the colours of the country’s national
flag with this inscription in Buli: “Won neak Ghana.” It means: “God bless
Ghana.” The mob dragged the boy to that pillar and tied him against it for
another two hours whilst the blood that oozed without a break from his body
clotted and dried under the blazing gaze of a furious sun.
For some time, he sagged looking weak within the rope
used in swaddling him to the pillar. The fluid that trickled from his swollen
eyes was a mixture of tears and blood. Thick mucus, accompanied by streaks of
blood, streamed out freely from his nostrils.
As the exhausted sun was about to retire to bed behind
the wild hills of the Builsaland, the crushed youngster suddenly began to fight
for his life in what some later suspected to be not just a sign of internal
bleeding but also a clue of imminent death. At that point, those who beat him
untied him. Then, they led him back― at a pace too much for him to contend
with― to the one who handed him over to them.He had been punished several times before for things
he allegedly stole. But this one was to be his last torture.
*The boy
died.
The enthusiasm in the pace of the crowd, as they
dragged him back to where he would die, only showed that a mission had been
accomplished to their satisfaction.
If the boy was possessed by a demon to steal without
fright, then the mob itself was possessed by a legion to murder without remorse.
Like Judas Iscariot who sold his virgin-born rabbi for
30 pieces of silver and remorsefully returned the money only when it was too
late, the uncle who gave his nephew out to be tortured over a stolen wristwatch
reportedly quivered at the gory spectacle when the unfamiliar crowd brought his
nephew back to him.
After the mob had left satisfied, Achantuik, for fear
that the boy (who was still hysterically fighting alone and gasping) might
stray out of sight and finally waddle into the sensitive long arms of the law,
reportedly tied his hands and legs together on the compound. The rope was to
strictly restrict his movement. He was so confined for two days.
Around evening on Monday 18th of the same month, the
boy’s condition rapidly grew so worse that the invisible Lucifer himself would
tremble in his usual private and, with panicky eyes and in a baritone whisper
to himself, deny involvement in what led to that unsightly climax.
The terrifying development compelled Achantuik, who
now carried overlapping beads of sweat on his forehead, to rake through the
area jet-footed for urgent assistance. Eventually, he rushed to a chemical
store in the community where one Peter Abolek allegedly prescribed a drug to
stabilise the boy.
Achantuik returned sheepishly to the house at night
with Peter and the latter purportedly injected a drug into the restless lad.
The said injection did not help it. The boy died that same night, with his
red-dotted eyes partially opened and his tongue, drenched in blood and starchy
saliva, almost half out. So ended a sudden struggle that lasted forty-eight
hours in that hidden corner of the district.
“They tied him down like a goat. They tied the legs
and tied the hands together before they [injected] him. And he died with the
rope like a goat. And he died outside, not even inside the yard,” Eric Kwesi
Ateng, a fuming relative to the boy, told me in a recorded interview at
Sandema, capital of the Builsa North District.
*The
“secret” burial.
Peter left. Shortly after, Achantuik informed his own
parents― who also are the boy’s grandparents― that their grandson had passed
away.
The boy was buried that night in a muffled ceremony
held in a flash under an ominous stare of the solitary moon and the unmarried
stars. The following day, a contingent of elders from Achantuik’s family
travelled a distance to inform a group of elders in Teini’s family that their
grandson suddenly developed high fever, died after he was injected to stabilise
him and that he had been buried the previous night.
The elders mourned. But in reply, they asked that the
police be informed of the boy’s death to avoid any criminal charges in the
future considering the circumstances (the public torture and the administration
of drug) under which he died. The visitors were not comfortable with that
suggestion. But their hosts were resolute in their position. They insisted it
would be a wise thing to bring the police into the picture without delay
because someone among those who saw how it all happened would someday leak the
information to the security agencies and the law would come after all those
involved at a blind force that would leave behind far-reaching ripples.
Subsequently, the elders broke the bad news to Teini
on the telephone. She left Accra immediately. And soon after her arrival the
following day, she headed for the police station to report the case and to
demand exhumation apparently in a quest for truth and justice. She suspected
her son died as a result of the beating he suffered or the drug administered on
him and not in any way associated with the reported high fever. Family sources
told me the boy never showed any high fever syndrome throughout his life.
Sources from the same family also have told me the
boy’s body is not in the grave where those behind his midnight burial claim to
have laid him to rest. The handlers of his burial are pointing at a heap of
sand capped with a clay pot around the yard where he died as the site of his
resting place. But some sources have affirmed their belief that the body is in
a shallow grave by a river called Kalenbele not far from his grandparents’
house at Yiisumsa inside Wiaga. So, why would his undertakers direct the gravediggers
to a riverbank?
As Eric puts it: “They have a local belief that when
they bury the boy at that same house (where he was tortured to death), there
would be a lot of confusion [in that house]. Even [as a result of] a small
fight, one of them has to pass away. So far as it’s the beating that [has]
caused the death, if you even slap your colleague in the house, the person
might also die. That is why they [didn’t] want to bury the boy at the house
[but] buried him at the riverside.”
*Five
arrested, three standing trial.
Moments after Teini had lodged her report, the police
stormed Wiaga.They captured Achantuik (who is said to have ordered
the beating and bought the drug), Peter (who reportedly administered the drug)
and the grandparents of the slain boy (who supposedly endorsed the rushed
burial) at separate locations. But another key suspect (name withheld for investigation
purposes) fled during the police raid on the area.
Marcellinus Ayoung, the fire officer who allegedly
spearheaded the mob justice, was arrested later.
Police are pressing holding charges against the
suspects― holding charges because the Builsa District Police Command says only
the Attorney-General’s Department, based on the docket and the evidence filed
against the suspects, can determine the final charges to be presented in a
court of competent jurisdiction on the murder case.
The grandparents were taken into custody for their
alleged involvement in the hasty burial of the boy in what the police refer to
as hindrance of inquest. Whilst Peter was apprehended for murder as “neither an
unqualified nurse nor a dispenser”, Marcellinus was nabbed for causing harm and
Achantuik busted for both causing harm and for abetment of crime.
The two oldies were granted police bail almost
immediately because their role was a misdemeanor. On Monday 1st February, 2016,
Marcellinus was granted bail by the District Magistrate Court at Sandema with
Peter and Achantuik remanded into police custody to reappear in court together
with Marcellinus on Monday 15th February, 2016.
*Selective
justice?
Some observers and families are in growing doubt that
justice will be served because of the fingerprints of some political titans
they claim already are trying to twist the arms of the law, to pervert the
course of justice, in favour of one particular suspect― Marcellinus.
It is reported that the police initially, due to
political meddling, were dragging their feet to arrest Marcellinus until a
group of enraged youth of the district was about to convene a news conference
to petition the Inspector General of Police (IGP). That planned public protest
is said to have inspired the Builsa District Police Command with fear, hence
the arrest of the fire officer without further feet dragging.
But the public satisfaction that greeted the last arrest
was brief. Marcellinus’s debut at the magistrate court on the murder matter saw
him walk out of police net to his house on bail that same day. Angry residents
do not understand why Marcellinus, who led the beating that weakened the boy
until he became hysterical, was released on bail to walk about freely, whilst
Achantuik, who bought the drug administered on the deceased, and Peter, whose
alleged role only came into the picture at a point the boy was already crushed
by a scale of torture reportedly fronted by Marcellinus, are still in police
custody on the orders of that same court.
An Artists Impression of How The Boy Was Killed |
They see Marcellinus as the prime suspect responsible
for the boy’s death because it was his wholesale beating that prompted a
needless injection. If he had not beaten in the first place, injection would
not have been applied. And if Peter and Achantuik do not deserve to walk freely
for now, why should Marcellinus still be in office uniform, as free as air? As
long as the fireman is seen as a root of the problem, he should be the object
of focus (among the suspects captured so far) in ‘uprooting’ (not ‘axing’) the
whole ‘tree’ in the murder case brought before the court.
This is where residents are beginning to fret
seriously, saying they only foresee a concerted delivery of a legal hearing
travelling on a bumpy road fogged by politically induced favouritism and ending
not in what they expect of the rule of law but in a planned miscarriage of
justice.
“If they didn’t beat the boy, he wouldn’t feel any
pain [let alone to talk of] drug matter. The one who has been set free is
really a worry to many people. Even me, I’m worried. You cannot count the
number of people [who] beat the boy. It is the leader of the beating group that
would be able to tell A or B is among. And he is the one they have set free.
That is what is worrying the people. People are mad about it. The thing
happened in public,” an angry resident, Jacob Akanbong, poured out his grief.
A number of those who want Marcellinus charged for
murder and put behind bars, as Achantuik and Peter, also have questioned if the
district magistrate court, where the firefighter has been released on bail, has
jurisdiction to grant bail on a murder charge.
When I visited the Builsa District Police Command, the
District Commander, Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) Kwame Nimo, explained
that Marcellinus was on bail because the holding charge “for him now is causing
harm and causing harm is a bailable offence”.
He added: “So, in the discretion of the court, the
court granted him bail for him to be appearing before court anytime that he is
needed or anytime the case is called. So, it’s not the case that he has been
left off the hook and roaming in town whilst others are in custody.”
*So, who
killed Kweku?
Two theories as to what killed the boy are before
court. Did he die from torture or as a result of lethal injection? Be it the
beating or the drug― the answer does not lie in the tongues of the three
suspects standing trial for his death. The answer is in the grave, six feet deep
down, where his body is. The preserved truth lies somewhere inside that
decomposed body for only a pathologist to spot and tell.
The mood in court, which is a clear reflection of the
general atmosphere in the district, unmistakably suggests that the body will be
exhumed for a pathologist to pronounce who really ended the teenager’s life.
For now, the freedom of those involved in the alleged murder is dangling
perilously in the balance. The court, after the pathologist has spoken, will
decide who from the courtroom goes home and who proceeds to jail.
Now, ahead of the widely anticipated exhumation, those
who buried the boy in a hurry are said to be sitting on oversize hooks. Angry
relatives who say Achantuik and his company of elders have thrown dunes in the
eyes of the police by pointing at a wrong grave for the exhumation-bent law
enforcers also are saying their side has come under pressure to put to rest the
debate about the spot the boy has been laid to rest.
“People have told us where they have shown the police
is not the actual grave where they buried the boy. The boy has been buried near
a river. What they showed to the police is just like a camouflaged grave,” Eric
Kwesi Ateng, an inconsolable in-law to the family of the 15-year-old boy,
revealed.
The District Police Commander, who already has
disclosed plans to have the body exhumed and examined by a pathologist, sounded
cocksure during my interview with him that the grave the boy’s grandparents
showed to the police is where the boy’s body is.
“The grandparents who ordered the burial of the boy
took us to the burial place and showed us. So, we believe that is the place of
the burial of the boy. And I don’t think they could have taken us to any wrong
place because eventually the body is going to be exhumed and we expect to find
a body of the age of such a person,” DSP Nimo stated.
If the grave already shown to the police turns out to
be an empty spot feigned as a tomb with a mere heap of sand, it would confirm
the suspicion that the boy did not die of high fever as his mother was told. If
the body in the grave hauled to pathologist’s slab turns out to be that of
someone else and not that of the boy, the discovery would expose a group of
people who think it was the torture and not the injection that killed the boy.
And if the grave the police are heading towards with pickaxe and shovel is
actually where the wanted body is, it would mean Achantuik and his party of
elders believe they are innocent of the charges being held against them.
*Torn
between freedom and justice
The court will sit again on Monday 15th February, this
year, in an emotive case featuring one of Ghana’s most eagle-eyed and
exceptional lawyers, Thomas Alonsi, who carries on his shoulders the hopes of
Kweku David Achantuik and Peter Abolek.
For now, relatives of the boy who want the body
disinterred keep saying pressure is mounting on them to put a stop to the push
for exhumation before the police start digging the grave to unearth the answer.
So great is the pressure that I found it difficult to hear from Teini herself
when I tried to interview her.
She has been torn between protecting her in-laws and
calling for justice for her son and for that matter demanding for exhumation of
the body of her son. The day I went round the district to comb for facts was
the day she was scheduled to travel back to Accra to prepare for the next
sitting in court at Sandema on Monday February 15, this year. I met her at the
O.A Travel and Tour bus station at Sandema. She cautiously told a friend of
mine who is fluent in Buli (the local language of the area) that she was under
overpowering pressure from the elders not to vent her flaming agony anymore to
the outside world beyond the law court to where she already had dragged the ‘highly
combustible’ matter.
She did not speak to me. I tried but she would not.
But what she could have said in audible words was written in bold letters on
her face. Her face looked lifeless like a solitary grave as the bus moved
slowly out of the station towards Accra. Her moist eyes blinked contemplatively
as she gazed absentmindedly at the cloudless sky through the inch-thick glass
of the bus. As the journey began, she appeared to have switched her thought to
a latent conflict about her preferred next destination, which was not Accra―
but freedom or justice?
Is the future destination of the just-started case in
court going to spell freedom for her in-law who is being hunted by the law, or
justice for the baby she breastfed fifteen years ago but was slain like a goat
fifteen years later?
She knows she cannot eat her cake and have it as she
is sharply torn between freedom and justice. If she wants freedom for
Achantuik, her in-law, then, she may have to forget her demand for justice for
Kweku, her son. And if she insists her son must get justice, then, she may have
to gird herself for the taunting memories that it is because she brought in the
law that her in-law, her slain son’s uncle, is no longer a freeman even if his
freedom is curtailed for a year.
Even though the red O.A Travel and Tour bus was packed
with companionable passengers, the grieving mother appeared to be a lone
traveler somewhere on a self-driven bus, taken deep by sorrow on a lonely,
endless road. I was overcome by grief as the bus vanished gradually from sight.
And it was only when tears crept into my eyes and were about to seep away like
waterfalls I realised I left home without a handkerchief. This is just the
beginning of the matter. To be continued.....
By Edward Adeti
By Edward Adeti
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