The thin veil separating order from chaos in our communities has been torn asunder, not by the exigencies of poverty, but by the deliberate, chilling embrace of criminality. The recent eruption of violence in Nsawam-Adoagyiri on the 7th of July, 2026, serves as a stark, harrowing testament to the erosion of our collective values.

The swift intervention by the Eastern South Regional Police Command, in collaboration with a team from the National Operations Directorate, resulting in the apprehension of 258 suspects, is a commendable demonstration of professional vigilance.
This decisive operation, executed under the robust, proactive leadership of the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Christian Tetteh Yohuno, signals a departure from reactive policing to a state of strategic deterrence. In an era where the fabric of our society is tested by the winds of lawlessness, the firm hand of the IGP provides a necessary anchor, reaffirming that the state remains the ultimate arbiter of peace.
Yet, we must pause to contemplate the gravity of the debris left in the wake of this disturbance. To loot shops, vandalise sacred community pillars like the Oko Anadwo Palace and our shared sporting infrastructure, and terrorise mobile money vendors is not a protest; it is a declaration of war against the very social contract that secures our peace. Such acts of barbarism, carried out under the cover of communal agitation, are but symptoms of a deepening malaise that threatens the democratic stability we so painstakingly curate.
When the instruments of law and order recover not just locally manufactured firearms, but a cocktail of narcotics and illicit stimulants, suspected Indian hemp, tramadol, and Viagra, the veil lifts to reveal a more sinister reality. We are witnessing the weaponisation of youth, fuelled by a chemical bypass of conscience.
This is the tragedy of a generation adrift, where the promise of the future is exchanged for the transient high of destruction. It raises a haunting, constitutional question: What use is a democracy if its youth, the very custodians of tomorrow, operate in a state of self-inflicted anarchy?
The confluence of armaments and narcotics suggests that this was no spontaneous outburst, but a calculated descent into hooliganism. We must ask ourselves: who benefits when our streets become zones of terror?
The Police have cautioned the youth to remain law-abiding, a plea that must resonate far beyond the walls of the detention facility where these suspects now await the cold reality of justice. However, the burden cannot rest solely on the shoulders of the security services.
IGP Christian Tetteh Yohuno’s commitment to restoring order is the first step, but it must be met with a corresponding commitment from the community to renounce those who seek to profit from mayhem.
We require a radical awakening, a civic renaissance that prioritises the rule of law over the impulsive dictates of the mob. To the architects of these disturbances: know that your actions have invited a scrutiny that will not be easily assuaged.
To the citizenry: we must be the vigilant sentinels of our own peace, for when the rule of law is subverted by the rule of the rabble, it is the innocent who pay the ultimate price.
The arrest of 258 individuals is a massive administrative and investigative undertaking. It speaks volumes of the logistical capacity and operational readiness under the current police administration. Yet, this must be a watershed moment.
Let the courts move with precision; let the investigation be thorough, ensuring that the ringleaders are unmasked and the innocent cleared of suspicion.
We cannot afford to return to the status quo. If the law is to have any meaning, it must be felt not only as a corrective force but as a prophylactic against future degradation.
Let this be the final hour of impunity in Adoagyiri. Under the vigilant watch of IGP Christian Tetteh Yohuno, justice must be served, and peace must be restored, not through the fear of the gun, but through the enduring, unassailable triumph of the law.
The path to national development is paved with the bricks of discipline and the mortar of respect for constitutional authority. When we stand together, under the shadow of the law, we ensure that our institutions remain resilient against the storms of disorder. May this be the dawn of a new, disciplined civic order in Ghana.
Raymond Ablorh writes on governance, institutional reform, and the quest for a more accountable state.
By Raymond Ablorh



















