Tuesday 20 June 2017

TALKING DRUM: Of a lynched Soldier, Oba Chandler & the Rogers!



Major Adam Mahama

At the Reception Hall at 3FM, TV3’s sister station, in Accra, were two security men on duty that very night. They sat dejectedly and seemingly talking to the television set that hung on the wall. 

The two guys were fuming that my “good evening” to them was submerged in their rants. Showing on the television was News@10 on TV3. The Anchor was Stephen Anti and he was serving his viewers what would become, in my estimation, the most unpalatable news since the year 2017 began. 

A soldier had been brutally lynched at Denkyira-Obuase in the Central Region. The soldier, Captain Maxwell Adam Mahama, suffered in the hands of his accusers an excruciating pain of unfathomable weaponry of cement blocks and sticks. This pain, not even the boxers that once fought with Muhammad Ali could have endured it.

So, what was Captain Adam Mahama’s crime? Media reports have suggested that he had stopped on his way, for jogging, to buy some ‘food items’ from a market woman by the road side that leads to Denkyira-Obuase. These food items he would leave it with the woman to pick them up on his way back. When he dipped his hand into his pocket for money to pay for the goods, the woman saw his side gun. This woman, we are told, later called the Assemblyman for the area that he had seen an armed robber.

The rest of the story ended up that this Assemblyman, William Baah, allegedly incited his people to stone Captain Adam Mahama to death. And this was the very rant of the two security men that manned 3FM on that Monday, May 29.

When I returned to the newsroom with my editor, as we had closed, to work on this breaking news, I could hardly understand how cruel human beings could be at times. There on social media was a video of a murder which I believe that even when Al-Shabaab, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant [ISIS] and the Taliban see it they would be surprised at. 

I must confess that I have heard, read, and watched a number of crime stories as reported by the media. However, two of all these crime stories get me heartbroken. One is that of Captain Adam Mahama’s death and the other involving a man named Oba Chandler and a woman and her two daughters referred to as the Rogers.

Oba Chandler
On June 1, 1989, Florida in the United States of America recorded one of its most notorious homicide cases. Joan Rogers, 36, Michelle Rogers, 17, and Christie Rogers, 14, from Ohio had travelled for vacation in Florida. 

Here, they had visited Tampa Bay [a large natural harbour and estuary] and they would ask for directions from Chandler to their motel since they lost they way. This man would later lure the women, Joan Rogers [a mother and her two daughters; Michelle Rogers and Christie Rogers] for a cruise at night. However, little did they know that cruising onboard Chandler’s boat would be the hard way to say goodbye to the world. Yes!

Oba Chandler had raped all these three women, one after the other, and hanged to their necks each a cinder blocks and threw them into the Tampa Bay. Three days later, on June 4, Sunday morning, coast guards discovered the floating dead bodies staggering on the waters. 

“The women were pulled from Tampa Bay, bound, gagged, and naked below the waist,” writes the Daily Mail, UK.

Coast Guards discover the Rogers' bodies 
Mind you, this is not a thriller to any movie. This is a real account. Sergeant Glenn Moore who led the investigations had found out that the Rogers received a hand-written note for the direction they asked for. This handwriting was subsequently pasted on giant boards in town telling citizens to help figure out whose handwriting it was.

Four months into the investigations, police found a 24-year-old Canadian woman who also had been sexually assaulted by Oba Chandler. She was onboard the same blue and white boat when the unfortunate incident happened. This dastardly act took place only two weeks to the Rogers’ deaths. 

The Rogers
This Canadian woman would later help the police craft a composite sketch of the rapist through a vivid description of how her abuser looked like. When the image was published in the newspapers, it got massive attention. Immediately a neighbour of Oba Chandler, Jo Ann Steffey, saw the composite image she knew it was that man known for notoriety. 

After a long legal tassel as the prosecutor presented strong evidences together with the Canadian woman’s account, all against the rapist and serial killer, Oba Chandler was on September 29, 1994, sentenced to death. And, indeed, he was killed.

Thomas French, a reporter with the St Petersburg Times, in 1998 won a Pulitzer Prize [award] when he chronicled, in a seven-part series titled “Angels & Demons,”  the horrifying narrative of Oba Chandler and the Rogers. 

The gruesome murder of Captain Adam Mahama and that of the Angels and Demons may be two opposite accounts. However, one thing binds the two murder stories; the tendency of human beings getting cruel at times.

Sergeant Glenn Moore, who later retired to preach the word of God, once said while commenting on the case he investigated that “Angels and demons are high in arms, in battle, over the souls of men.” 

Indeed, the people around us including ourselves are either part of the angels or part of the demons that are bettering or destroying the world. What could have annoyed men with brains to pelt their fellow human being with cements blocks to death? And what could have caused a man to rape a mother and her two daughters and murder them afterwards?  

Oba Chandler was killed for his heinous crimes. Must Captain Adam Mahama’s killers be killed too? My view? Well, as DCE Kwame Kwakye is alleged to have once said; “I’m the who?” We leave it to the law.

However, should the law court find them guilty and say they are sentenced to jail ‘with hard labour,’ I only request that that labour be a daily ritual of excessive military drills at the Burma Camp. By this, we will all desist from mob justice and from evil ways.

The writer is a broadcast journalist with 3FM 92.7. Views expressed here solely remain his and not that of his organisation.
Twitter: @Aniwaba

Sunday 28 May 2017

TALKING DRUM: Update- Girl, 13, battling diabetes gets support!


Pamela and her mother being taken through how to use the log book, others

When the Diabetes Youth Care, a non-governmental organisation which caters for children with diabetes, visited little Pamela Wayor at Osu, in the Greater Accra region, she met us wearing a broad infectious smile.

The Diabetes Youth Care had read a feature I wrote about the plight of the 13 year old girl and with the swiftness of a duiker, they contacted to offer an assistance.

“Hello, my name is Dr. Nana Ama Barnes, I came across your article on the news and I wanted to know if I could help out. I have a diabetes support network for young ones living with diabetes. We can help her out,” read an email I received.

That email conversation would later on lead us to the house of the Wayors on that sunny Sunday, May 21, 2017. Pamela, today, wears a straight dress. Her permed hair is carefully combed backwards to tie it behind her. But, her somewhat swollen feet would not allow her dazzle in any ‘fashionable’ shoe as she rather wears a bathroom slippers.

Pamela sees me entering her compound and, like the cassava leaf, she stretched her arm with her palm widely opened for a warm handshake. 

“Hey Pamela, how you today?” I asked.

“I’m fine and you, too?” She said.

After a short familiarization between my guests from the Diabetes Youth Care and the Wayors, the President of the NGO, Joseph Kwamena Larsh, would tell the family the reason for the visit. 

“Diabetes Youth Care saw the story of our young girl which caught our attention. We decided to do a follow up and trace up so to provide all the necessary support our young girl would need,” said Larsh.

Mr. Larsh who is himself a diabetic assures the family that their ward would be fine in a very short while. 

President of DYC, Joseph Larsh, presenting donation to Esther Wayor
“Pamela in this case is a student and she is very young living with diabetes. We are going to provide her with a lot of education which she might not know as at now. We organise monthly meetings for them [children living with diabetes] educating them on living healthy as diabetic patients.”

He added that “you are going to see a big difference she joining us.”

For Esther Wayor, she counts herself blessed as one of the happiest persons to have enjoyed the benevolence of society.

“I am very happy and I thank Diabetes Youth Care for coming to my aid. A lot of people have assisted me after the story of Pamela was published,” said the mother seeking cure for her daughter.

Founder of DYC,, Dr. Nana Ama Barnes, takes selfie with Pamela and her friend
Indeed, few hours after the article detailing Pamela’s plight was published on 3news.com, on May 18, 2017 and titled “Life on hold! Girl, 13, battles diabetes,” I received a number of emails and messages on Twitter. These all pointed to one thing; how to support the little girl.

Richmond Apore is a Ghanaian based in the United States studying to become a medical doctor. In his email sent to me, he said “I came across your story on the plight of Pamela Wayor. And [I] was wondering how I could be of timely assistance in contributing funds for the purchase of the girl’s basic needs.”

The next day Mr. Apore sent via Western Union $200 to be given to Pamela. What impresses me in this assistance is that a student seeing it needful to donate in saving life.

Pamela on the visit of the Diabetes Youth Care was taught how to inject herself with insulin. With guidance from the founder of the NGO, Dr. Nana Ama Barnes, the girl was taken through the self-injection education. Pamela learnt that with ease.

Pamela injects herself with insulin after being taught
Esther Wayor is poised to see improvement in her daughter and so she pledges not to discard ways to properly feed her. “I will take good care of Pamela’s diet because diabetes is a dangerous disease. I have really suffered seeking medical care for her.”

Dr. Nana Ama Barnes says she has arranged for a dietician to assist Esther Wayor provide the girl with good care. 

Renowned author, Mark Twain, was not far from right when he opined that kindness is a language that the deaf can hear and the blind can see.

For those who contributed to Pamela’s well-being but would not want to be named, the family of the little girl says ‘thanks.’ And for those who wished assisting in anyway but could not, may God increase your yields to be of help some other time.

The writer is a broadcast journalist with 3FM 92.7. Views expressed here solely remain his opinion and not that of his organisation.
Twitter: @Aniwaba