
Audio By Carbonatix
Bono Regional Minister, Justina Owusu-Banahene, has assured of government’s commitment to improving and strengthening the nation's justice delivery system to boost investor confidence.
She said the nation was facing enormous challenges in her justice delivery system due to growing complexity and dynamics of crime as a result of technology, saying it required concerted efforts in strengthening peace and security in the country.
Madam Owusu-Banahene gave the assurance when she addressed the opening session of a day’s sensitization workshop on the Ghana Case Tracking System (CTS) on Wednesday in Sunyani.
In 2019, Ghana launched the first electronic Integrated Criminal Justice Case-Tracking System (CTS) project to support key stakeholders in the justice delivery system to collect, collate and harmonize statistical data for effective justice delivery.
The CTS project, which is being supported by the USAID is to enable the key actors - Police, Judiciary, Attorney General’s Department, Legal Aid Commission, Prisons and Economic and Organized Crime Office to electronically access and back the various stages of criminal cases from the point of arrest, investigations, prosecution, conviction, rehabilitation and release.
Madam Owusu-Banahene said delays and disparities in the justice delivery system if not checked, it could degenerate into chaos and disturb national peace and social cohesion that would subsequently drive investors away.
Before the implementation of the CTS, the Regional Minister said there was no proper coordination among key actors in the justice delivery system, saying the CTS would greatly help to improve transparency and accountability to sharpen the country’s justice delivery system.
Madam Owusu-Banahene advised the populace to develop interest in the CTS and demand for the utilization of the system by the justice sector institutions to achieve desirable outcomes
Latest Stories
-
Ghana’s 2026 artisanal gold output likely to surpass record 2025 level, Gold Board says
19 minutes -
Trump threatens to bomb bridges and power plants unless Iran resumes talks
30 minutes -
US Congress takes next step to make daylight saving time permanent
39 minutes -
Nigeria pension assets jump 51% to $22.8 billion, regulator says
49 minutes -
Trump retreat over Hormuz tolls suggests he is struggling to end Iran war
58 minutes -
ICE told to halt most vehicle stops after pair of fatal shootings
1 hour -
Xbox workers stunned after jobs ‘bloodbath’
1 hour -
US drivers may soon see pump prices climb back up to $4
1 hour -
Oil rises after US-Iran hostilities flare again with strikes on energy targets
2 hours -
Iran-linked vessels pass through Hormuz ahead of US blockade
2 hours -
Nepal court jails 2 former ministers, 14 others over refugee scam
2 hours -
Former president Sall to visit Senegal as he campaigns for UN chief post
2 hours -
Nigeria’s Dangote begins pricing local fuel sales in dollars, citing crude supply constraints
2 hours -
Nigeria to lead humanitarian response as UN support evolves, minister says
5 hours -
Fifty migrants feared lost in Mediterranean, 10 survive after boat capsizes, security sources say
5 hours