In the hallowed architecture of a democracy, the press is designed to be the lighthouse, not the storm. It is tasked with the solemn duty of illumination, guiding the public through the fog of governance with the steady beam of truth.
Yet, when a newspaper consistently chooses to trade its lantern for a torch, aiming to set fire to the very institutions that protect us, we must ask: whose interest is being served?
The persistent, almost rhythmic assault by The Herald on the Ghana Police Service has moved beyond the realm of oversight into the dark territory of a sustained vendetta.
For years, The Herald has fashioned itself as a self-appointed inquisitor of the police, spinning a web of narratives that seek to portray the Service as a bastion of rot.
From sensationalist claims regarding recruitment “scams” that ignore the rigorous reforms of the current administration, to the constant character assassination of the police leadership, the pattern is as clear as it is corrosive.
This is not journalism; it is a siege. It is the tactical deployment of ink to demoralize a frontline that stands between the citizens and chaos.
The latest salvo, a breathless report alleging paper leakage and bribery in the recent police promotion exams, is a classic study in the paper’s methodology. It relies on the oldest trick in the sensationalist’s handbook: the “faceless whistleblower.”
These phantom protagonists, conveniently anonymous and legally unreachable, serve as the perfect vessels for unsubstantiated malice. If these claims were birthed in truth, why do they lack the sunlight of identity? Why must they whisper from the shadows of a newsroom known for its hostility toward the uniform?
To suggest that a promotion exam conducted under the most stringent academic and security protocols was compromised requires more than an anonymous quote; it requires proof.
Yet, The Herald offers none. It fails to account for the logistical impossibility of such a widespread “leakage” without a single physical or digital artifact emerging as evidence.
If the papers were “sold,” where are the receipts of these transactions? Where is the trail? In the absence of facts, the paper offers only juxtaposition, placing the legitimate ambitions of hard-working officers alongside the grime of unverified gossip.
We must confront the moral bankruptcy of this approach. To attack the integrity of promotion exams is to attack the meritocracy of the Service itself. It is a cynical attempt to sow seeds of discord among the rank and file, suggesting to the successful officer that their merit is questioned, and to the unsuccessful one that they were cheated.
This is a dangerous game. When you undermine the internal morale of the police, you weaken the external security of the nation.
Constitutional clarity dictates that the press has the right to scrutinise. But there is no constitutional right to fabricate or to serve as a mouthpiece for disgruntled elements who seek to bypass the discipline of the Service through media blackmail.
The Ghana Police Service is an institution of law, governed by statutes and internal codes that The Herald habitually ignores in favour of “highly placed sources” that likely exist only in the fertile imagination of a biased editor.
Is it a coincidence that every major milestone or reform within the Police Service is met with a derogatory headline from this specific stable?
We have seen this play before. Whether it is the professionalization of the recruitment process or the modernization of tactical units, the paper finds a way to frame progress as a scandal. It is a logical fallacy of the highest order to believe that an entire institution is perpetually failing while a single newspaper is the only one “brave” enough to notice.
The truth is simpler: The Herald has become an echo chamber for the disgruntled. It has traded its professional sceptre for a partisan cudgel. We cannot allow the security of the state to be held hostage by a publication that prioritizes clicks over the Commonwealth.
As we move forward, the public must learn to distinguish between the watchdog that barks at a genuine intruder and the dog that barks at the moon out of habit. The Ghana Police Service, like any human institution, is not beyond reproach, but it deserves a critique based on evidence, not an ambush based on animus.
It is time to rubbish these faceless allegations and restore the dignity of the discourse. For if we allow the ink of malice to smudge the reputation of our protectors, we will soon find ourselves in a world where the only thing thinner than the truth is the paper it is printed on.
By Raymond Ablorh




















