Audio By Carbonatix
Yesterday, Thursday August 29, the Supreme Court panel on the election petition declared that President Mahama was “validly elected.”
Against all odds, the court, even if imperfect, had done their duty. Ayekoo to the Justices—regardless of how they voted.
Moments later, the first petitioner, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, stepped to the microphone to lower tensions and to begin the important work of re-uniting the country, after calling President Mahama to congratulate him. In what may be his finest moment in a distinguished career in politics, the former Foreign Minister urged the country to move on. As he put it, “Everything in my bones, in my upbringing and what I have done with my life thus far makes it imperative that I accept the decision made by the highest court in the land.” Then for the avoidance of doubt, he announced that the petitioners would not seek a review of the court decision. For this, as well as his decision to seek redress in court rather than on the streets, Nana Addo deserves commendation and gratitude.
Hours later, the President addressed the nation, calling for unity and quoting Nana’s uncle J.B. Danquah to match and re-enforce the conciliatory tone Nana had set. Said the President, “Strong institutions are the bedrock of strong nations.” Indeed, Mr. President.
Both leaders truly showed statesmanship and should be commended.
While we continue to study the reasoning behind the court decision and to await the Electoral Commission’s reaction, we can draw some conclusions.
The most significant is that while the Electoral Commission was not shown to be corrupt, it was shown to be incompetent. The Commission, together with Parliament, must harvest the lessons of this unfortunate episode and ensure that Ghana will never suffer again, the humiliation of waiting for 8 months to learn the winner of a Presidential election. This exercise is a luxury that our nation, facing the daunting challenges of development cannot afford. We must embed the role of IPAC in our laws and make honest changes to our election processes.
Before turning to the more urgent business of development, our political parties must address the disgraceful culture of insults that was condemned by the court to the adulation of Ghanaians and take the role of polling agents more seriously. Perhaps, if our polling station agents spread across Ghana had been better trained and performed better, we might have been spared the last 8 months of agony and tension.
As suggested by the President and Dr. Nduom, we must return urgently to the business of the people. We must work to improve our schools so that all our children can develop their God-given potential; work to create good jobs for our youth and improve our healthcare and public services.
Finally, at the risk of being cited for contempt, let me suggest that this case, while it was about politics and elections, exposed a few blemishes about our judiciary that should command the attention of our judges and lawmakers. Amongst these are the need for respect for due process in contempt cases, the need to speed up litigation as well as seek improvements in the temperament and demeanor of our judges.
Anger, respectfully, does not become even the best justices well. It bespeaks emotion, intolerance and partiality.
Let us move forward together.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Police net 120 suspects in major East Legon drug and crime swoop
5 minutes -
Ashanti: Police kill 3 suspected robbers during shootout at Anwiankwanta on Christmas Eve
15 minutes -
Why Ghana’s Constitution Review Committee’s Work Should Be Extended to Strategic Communication
19 minutes -
Prof. Prempeh defends lowering presidential age, cites Kufuor’s early leadership roles
37 minutes -
Presidential Age Limit: Unrestricted democracy could breed chaos – Prof. Agyeman-Duah warns
46 minutes -
MP Baffour Awuah advocates for legal framework on presidential continuity, not term extension
50 minutes -
Ghanaians entitled to propose constitutional changes – Charlotte Osei
53 minutes -
At 30, you lack the experience to be a President – Prof Agyeman-Duah
57 minutes -
One-year extension of presidential term unnecessary – Baffuor Awuah
1 hour -
Sam George lauds coordinated crackdown on cybercrime in Tabora and Lashibi
1 hour -
100 arrested in Accra’s Tabora in major Mobile Money fraud crackdown
1 hour -
BOG put GH¢4.69bn into gold-for-oil, lost over GH¢2.1bn with no impact — Audits show
2 hours -
CRC opted for broader reforms over abolishing ex-gratia – Charlotte Osei
2 hours -
Mahama’s record shows four-year presidential term is sufficient – Inusah Fuseini
2 hours -
Four-year term enough for accountability – Inusah Fuseini
2 hours
