The family of former Inspector General of Police Paul Tawiah Quaye has confirmed his passing after a short illness. Quaye served as Ghana’s IGP from 2009 to 2013 under Presidents John Evans Atta Mills and John Dramani Mahama, and was widely regarded as a disciplinarian and a patriot whose tenure modernised the police service and strengthened the country’s internal security architecture.
His Tenure As IGP (2009–2013)
- Appointed by the late President Atta Mills
- Continued under President John Mahama until retirement
- Tenure focused on police modernisation — equipment, training, processes
- Strengthened internal security architecture and inter-agency coordination
- Known publicly as a disciplinarian committed to professional standards
Ghana’s Mourning
- Family confirmed the demise; arrangements to be communicated
- Police Service expected to issue a formal tribute
- Mahama administration has lost a personally familiar former officer
- Civil society, retired-officer associations and security analysts have begun paying tribute
The Legacy
- Career officer who rose through the ranks before reaching the top job
- Tenure straddled Ghana’s transition from manual to digital policing systems
- Set early benchmarks for IGP conduct in the 4th Republic
- Praised by successors for the institutional foundations he laid
The Wider Context
Quaye’s passing comes during a period of debate about modern policing — community-policing initiatives, technology integration, and the IGP’s mandate over riot-control reforms. His tenure is being held up as a reference point in those conversations.
What Comes Next
- Family burial arrangements
- Official tribute from the Police Service
- Possible state-funeral consideration given his service profile
- Reflective coverage on his modernisation initiatives
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