The family of 19-year-old Ruth Abakah, who has been missing in Takoradi  since July 29, 2018, has been torn apart as her biological mother has  blamed the slow pace of investigations on the grandfather with whom she  lived.
 According to the grandfather, Mr Emmanuel Cobbinah Anzah, his daughter,  Ayisah (Ruth’s mother), who currently lived at Tarkwa Nsuaem, had  refused to talk or have anything to do with him over the missing girl as  she believed he did not push enough for the police to devote equal  attention to their case as has been done for the other three missing  girls — Priscilla Blessing Bentum, 21, Ruth Love Quayson, 18, and  Priscilla Mantebea Koranchie, 15.
 At a meeting with the police on Wednesday, Mr Anzah, who fought hard to  push back tears, said he would not be able to lead them to his daughter  and would rather give them the directions and contact number for the  investigative team to reach her.
 The Western Regional Police Command had invited Mr Anzah yesterday to  seek information and also inform him about the discovery made by an  investigative team last Tuesday at Nkroful, where the skeletal remains  of a yet-to-be-identified person was retrieved from a well in an  uncompleted building, which is suspected to be that of the 19-year-old  Miss Abakah who was reported missing by her grandfather in July 2018.
Police invitation
 Mr Anzah said based on the complaint he lodged with the police on July  29, 2018, he was contacted last Tuesday when the police made the  discovery at the uncompleted building at Nkroful, the same place where  the prime suspect in the three missing girls’ case, Samuel  Udoetuk-Willis, was rearrested last December after he had escaped from  lawful custody.
Ruth the Sunday School teacher
 Talking about his granddaughter who had been living with his family  since she was aged three, Mr Anzah said she was a Sunday School teacher  of the Methodist Church Ghana, Diabene Society, and like every Sunday,  went to church on the day (July 29, 2018) she went missing.
 “I took my granddaughter from the mother at the age of three as the  father died before her birth and we wanted to help our daughter out in  taking care of the children. My wife was an educationist so we thought  it was better for the children to be with us in Takoradi instead of  Tarkwa, and there was never a problem with that arrangement for the 15  years she and her other siblings had stayed with us, until she failed to  return home after church on that fateful July 29,” the middle-aged man  who occasionally paused and took a deep breath, narrated. 
 When the girl went missing, “I went to the Diabene Chief’s palace that  evening and immediately, an announcement of the disappearance of Ruth  was made on the community’s public address system”.
The call
 “The following day, I went to the police at Kojokrom and then moved to  Takoradi and we were assured of a search to locate her for us”.
 “That same day, I received a call from a lady who told me on the other  side of the phone that our granddaughter whom we were looking for was  with them and that they had kidnapped her and she would only be released  after a ransom between GH¢20,000 and GH¢30,000 had been paid,” he said.
 Recounting the anxious moments he and his wife went through as they  tried to negotiate the ransom, Mr Anzah said he told the caller that the  family could not afford the money they had demanded as they were  pensioners and as soon as the caller hanged up, he went back to the  police at both Kojokrom and Takoradi to report the incident and then  gave them the number.
 “The investigators also called that number and tried to negotiate with  the kidnappers but they did not arrive at any conclusion,” the missing  girl’s grandfather indicated.
Transfer of GH¢5
 The kidnappers, he further said, were very persistent with their calls  to drum home their demand for the ransom “so we then decided to know  whose number it was by transferring an amount of GH¢5 to that number and  the transaction confirmed the recipient as Josephine Dadzie.”
 Mr Anzah also revealed that later, they called again, this time, with  his granddaughter’s number requesting him to transfer any amount to  their phone so they release the girl; however, I told them I did not  have enough money to send to them.
 “For them to take money from us at all cost, the kidnappers found my  granddaughter’s ID card and registered the mobile money with her MTN sim  card, then requested that we send GH¢202 or GH¢303 to that number.
 “They had all along used a Vodafone line to call but when we saw Ruth’s  number, we sent the GH¢202 they had requested,” he further revealed.
Waiting in vain
 They then told us to wait at Fijai Junction the next day. We waited from 5:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. to no avail,” he said.
 “We called again and they told us to move to Kojokrom Junction. We went  there and waited up to 7:30 p.m. still no sign of them or my  granddaughter,” he said with intermittent pauses.
 The next call to the kidnappers, he said, was an insult and the  explanation that the family did not pay on time so that should serve as  punishment for them. Next time they should be on time and the call  terminated.
 “The next day, they called to tell me they were now going to think about  the exact amount and that they would call us back when they were ready.  In all these developments, we kept faith and informed the police from  the very first call to the ransom and gave the police the numbers they  left for us.”
Police
 Mr Anzah said though the police took over the case, the kidnappers  contacted and persistently asked for the ransom and had hoped that the  police could use the contact number from which they called to locate  them but that was not successful.
 He expressed disappointment that despite the police being aware of their  missing granddaughter, they failed to account for her among the missing  girls but expressed the hope that the discoveries from the ongoing  investigations would help resolve the issue.
Painful one year
 Asked how the family had coped with the disappearance of the girl, Mr  Anzah said: “It has been a painful one year. Even when we went back to  ask that the number of missing girls be corrected to four and not three,  our plea was not taken until the discovery last Tuesday.
 “If for nothing at all, now our daughter will know that we indeed acted in our bid to find her missing Ruth.” 
Source: Graphic.com.gh