Audio By Carbonatix
The Supreme Court has set October 26, 2021, to rule on the application to have Justice Honyenuga removed from the hearing the criminal trial of former COCOBOD Chief Executive Dr Stephen Kwabena Opuni.
This comes after Attorney General Godfred Dame filed for a review arguing that Mr Opuni’s right to be heard fairly had been breached by the Judge, aside from a demonstration of bias.
In July 2021, Dr Opuni’s lawyers applied to the Supreme Court to restrain Justice Honyenuga from hearing the matter.
He alleged that his right to be heard fairly had been breached by the Judge, aside from a demonstration of bias.
The allegations flowed from Justice Honyenuga’s ruling on a submission of no case application. Dr Opuni’s lawyers contended that the judge committed an error of law when he rejected some documents submitted as evidence.
The documents were witness statements said to have been obtained by the state during investigations. One is a statement by the Head of the Cocoa Research Institute, denying that he had been coerced to do his work.
Dr Opuni’s lawyers said this and other related statements were withheld by state prosecutors and only made available when they applied for them.
Justice Honyenuga, however, rejected the claims.
The lawyers contended that this position taken by the judge is contrary to law. However, the Supreme Court, in its judgment, took the view that these statements were admissible.
Following a majority decision upholding an argument of bias against the trial judge, a Supreme Court Justice, Clemence Honyenuga, the A-G subsequently filed for a review.
Attorney General, Godfred Dame, filed for a review following a majority decision upholding an argument of bias against the trial judge, a Supreme Court Justice, Clemence Honyenuga.
According to Mr Dame, the July 28 decision, among other things, “contained fundamental and grave errors which have manifestly resulted in a substantial miscarriage of justice.”
He believes it “effectively ignored the time-honoured fundamental and mandatory preconditions for an invocation of the Supreme Court’s supervisory jurisdiction for an order of certiorari to quash an alleged error contained in a decision of a Superior Court”.
Justice Gertrude Tokornoo and Justice Ashie Kotey have been added to the five earlier Justices; Jones Dotse, Gabriel Pwamang, Agnes Dodzie, Tanko Amadu and Avril Lovelace-Johnson, for the review application.
Latest Stories
-
Trump says $72bn Netflix-Warner Bros deal ‘could be a problem’
55 minutes -
Nigerian gov’t secures release of 100 kidnapped schoolchildren, Channels TV says
1 hour -
Shooting at South African bar leaves 11 dead, including a young child, police say
1 hour -
Bobi Wine says Uganda security forces beat him
1 hour -
Trump criticises Democrat he pardoned over not switching political parties
2 hours -
Nigeria seeks French help to combat insecurity, Macron says
2 hours -
Congo fighting flares within hours of Trump’s peace deal ceremony
2 hours -
Chevron to join Nigeria oil licence auction, plans rig deployment in 2026
2 hours -
Why I refused to sign Flavour – Kcee
5 hours -
‘My family destroyed my marriage with Annie, now they’re after Natasha’ – 2Face
5 hours -
Annie Macaulay reverts Instagram name to ‘Idibia’ amid 2Face’s marital drama with Natasha
5 hours -
Wizkid shades Davido as his album emerges most streamed African album of 2025
5 hours -
Nigeria moves fast to shield Benin’s democracy from dawn coup, say Tinubu
6 hours -
Kufuor blames key Akufo-Addo policies for NPP’s 2024 defeat
6 hours -
Prof. Adei urges gov’t to back private universities as medical admissions hit crisis levels
6 hours
