Impunity Of The Dragons

Our Chinese guests are pushing us to the wall and it is time we acted to obviate further breaches of our laws. The Obuasi murder of two locals by Chinese nationals operating in the country was the height of impunity by foreigners, and when the story was flashed in the media yesterday, it provoked widespread anger among Ghanaians. We associate ourselves with the national anger and call for action to stop the Chinese from trampling upon our laws. The Chinese, being good guests of ours is an important determinant with regard to how long we can contain them in the country. As we compose this commentary, a Chinese national is being held by the Police after allegedly killing his compatriot. The same man had earlier snatched a taxi, using a cleaver in a manner which had many asking whether he was not a mental case. A Ghanaian dare not show such brazenness in the streets of Beijing. The breaches of our laws by the Chinese are especially approaching impunity level, a situation which calls for a government intervention, as being sought by the Obuasi West constituency. Our country�s hospitability is legendary, but when this is abused, the need to take appropriate action should not be overlooked. The brazenness of the Chinese, characteristic of Ghanaians, has received varied interpretations, all of which border on suspicion that they are being shielded by either government officials or individual businessmen who are fronting for them. In the case of the murdered Ghanaians, we are being told that a certain soldier was involved in the purchase of the gold-bearing land and which constituted the source of the fatal trouble. It might be interesting to find who this soldier is and how he came into contact with the Chinese. A lot could be unravelled that would help in making a headway in this galamsey confusion. We have been told earlier that the Chinese cannot come into the country without going through the requisite immigration procedures. But it would seem that the screening required before the issuance of visas to them have failed in most cases to determine the quality of the Chinese who find their way into the country. It is instructive to recall how operatives of the Ghana Immigration Service (GIS) recently turned away over 20 Chinese nationals who were entering the country illegally. The source of their confidence, when they start their flight to Ghana, is beyond our ken, but it could be that others succeeded in doing so in breach of our immigration laws. There is a frightening influx of Chinese nationals into the country, some of them flouting the conditions of their stay so brazenly that, they constitute national security threats and not the well-secured pink sheets in the custody of the Supreme Court.