Event centres must prioritise safety of patrons — Dr Antwi-Danso

By Eric Appah Marfo 

Accra, May 17, GNA – Dr Vladimir Antwi-Danso, an International Relations and Security Expert, has urged owners of event centres to prioritise security during public events to protect patrons from crime and emergencies. 

He said event organisers had a responsibility to ensure the safety of guests, including personal security, property protection and emergency preparedness. 

“The onus lies on them to provide security and security in the broad sense of the word. People’s personal security, property security and the essence of the event themselves,” he said in an interview with the Ghana News Agency on Friday. 

Dr Antwi-Danso explained that many people wrongly blamed the police for inadequate security at private events, although organisers were required to notify law enforcement agencies and request security support. 

“The police do not know that there is going to be a programme somewhere unless organisers inform them to come and ensure safety,” he explained. 

He noted that event centres and entertainment venues could easily become targets for criminal activities, fights, fires or other emergencies if proper security arrangements were not put in place. 

Dr Antwi-Danso said organisers must ensure adequate police presence, deploy trained guards and establish clear emergency response systems capable of responding swiftly to incidents. 

“Anything can happen at such events. A fire can break out. People can come and fight. Miscreants can appear there. It is the organisers who have the responsibility to ensure that these things do not happen. If they happen, the mitigation should be quick and swift,” he said. 

Dr Antwi-Danso encouraged event organisers to educate patrons on safety measures and create environments where suspicious behaviour could easily be reported. 

He urged the public not to rely entirely on security agencies but to remain personally alert and security conscious during outings. 

His comments come in the wake of the arrest of Joshua Kojo Anane Boateng, a 36-year-old entrepreneur accused of drugging women, sexually abusing them and sharing intimate images online without consent. 

Police investigations showed that the suspect frequented nightclubs, where he seduced and drugged victims before recording and distributing explicit content through a Telegram platform known as “VIP Sleep Fetish 2025.” 

The Ghana Police Service said electronic devices, including mobile phones, a laptop, memory devices and suspected drug substances, were retrieved during his arrest. 

Under Ghana’s Cybersecurity Act, 2020 (Act 1038), the non-consensual sharing of intimate images constitutes a criminal offence.   

The law also provides penalties for online sexual exploitation, cyberstalking and related offences aimed at protecting victims from abuse on digital platforms. 

GNA 

Edited by Agnes Boye-Doe 

Reporter: Eric Appah Marfo 

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