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Dozens Hospitalised After Police Clash With Protesting Students 

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The Ghana Police Service has suspended a deputy commander and two officers after Monday’s (June 13) clash with protesting students sent 38 to the hospital.

Students of the Islamic Senior High School in Kumasi, Ghana’s second-largest city, protested against frequent motor traffic accidents in front of the school.

After they set up roadblocks, the police fired warning shots in a bid to disperse the crowd and allow traffic through.

“The students pelted the police with stones and the police used pepper spray and fired warning shots in an attempt to disperse them,” police spokesperson Grace Ansah-Akrofi said in a statement late Monday.

“Even though nobody was hit by a bullet, the police handling of the incident was poor and fell short of our standard operating procedure on crowd control,” she added.

“As a result, the deputy regional police commander, DCOP Kwesi Akomeah-Apraku, has been removed from the position and has been interdicted.”

Ansah-Akrofi said that two other officers were also suspended “to make way for a thorough investigation into the incident”.

Ghana’s education ministry condemned the violence, saying it was “collaborating with relevant state institutions to bring finality to the matter”.

“Out of the 38 students (taken to hospital), 22 have been discharged,” ministry spokesperson Kwasi Kwarteng said.

Road accidents are frequent in Ghana due to poor road conditions and reckless driving.

The West African state’s National Roads Safety Commission recorded more than 200 deaths from road accidents between January and mid-March this year.

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