"Torture Home, when a man of god abuses children" is an investigation an Echoing Hill village orphanage run by Baptist Pastor Lawrence Lamina.
The trade exploits couples desperate for a baby and young pregnant single mothers — often stigmatised in a country where abortion is illegal except in the most dire medical emergency.
The team found bogus doctors and clinics offering spurious fertility treatments in return for large amounts of money.
[8] On 23 September 2015 Anas premiered, in four showings, in front of a record-breaking audience of more than 6500 people at the Accra International Conference Center,[9] his undercover film "Ghana In The Eyes Of God".
[10] A disciplinary committee of the Judicial Council was set up to probing the allegations of bribery and extortion against the thirty-four judges and magistrates.
Those removed with benefits were remorseful when they appeared before the Committee and apologized profusely to the people of Ghana and the Judiciary for bringing the name of the institution into disrepute by their conduct.
[17] The Council, where Anas is personally presenting the evidence, resumed sitting mid-January 2016 to continue probing into the rest of the cases.
The second installment, Doom - the silent killer next door, tells three social interest stories of how families lost loved ones to the carnage on Ghana's roads, and highlighted some of the dangers associated with commercial transport.
[19] Anas teamed up with colleague Rosemary Nwaebuni to investigate the activities of quack doctors who risk the lives of vulnerable people in Nigeria.
The film led to the arrest of two people who were using pharmacy shops and beer parlours as operating theaters for patients who were in desperate need of medical attention.
It presents bogus doctors with no medical qualifications and little knowledge providing illegal abortions and the resultant fatal injuries.
[20] Filmed in Northern Ghana, where Anas exposed the barbaric sacrifices of children who were believed to bring ill luck to their families.
Passports were made in the name of the then President, the Inspector General of Police and other high political and national characters to prove the system was corrupt.
An investigative story which exposed how Ivorian rebels invaded Ghanaian territories in 2005, made incursions into some northern communities, and subjected the inhabitants to constant torture and abuse.
Anas went undercover aboard a shipping vessel from Afko fisheries to expose the maltreatment of Ghanaian workers by a Korean employer.
He worked as a street hawker to expose police officers who took bribes from unlicensed traders on a major highway in Accra.