
Audio By Carbonatix
An Accra High Court has ruled that pressure group, Arise Ghana can stage its protest only between the hours of 8am to 4pm.
The court additionally directed that the protest should commence at the Obra Spot here in Accra and end at the Independence Square.
This was the decision of the court in connection with a case filed by the Ghana Police Service.
The Service filed the case seeking to halt the two day protest set to commence on Tuesday.
This was after it alleged in a statement that the group, Arise Ghana, had refused to begin and end the demonstration before night fall.
The group, however, contends it reached an agreement with the Police and is therefore surprised at the turn of events.
DSP Sylvester Asare on Monday urged the court to adjourn the matter since the Police Service was yet to receive documents filed by the protestors.
He asked for a two-day adjournment.
But lawyer for the protestors, Godwin Tameklo accused the Police of bad faith; adding that the protest was to take place on Tuesday.
He told the court that granting an adjournment will effectively mean putting the protest on hold. The group, he continued, informed the Police of the demonstration as far back as June 2.
The Court presided over by Justice Comfort Tasiame adjourned proceedings to 11:30am to enable the Police to study the documents.
At 11:30 am on Monday, DSP Asare once again asked for an adjournment.
He explained that the Police needed more time to study the documents.
On his part, Mr. Tameklo urged the court to dismiss the application, arguing that granting this request will empower the Police to use such processes to frustrate the rights of citizens to protest.
Justice Comfort Tasiame subsequently dismissed the request by the Police and directed that lawyers for the Service justify why the protest should be halted.
DSP Asare then told the court, the proposed timelines as put forward by the protestors have the potential to affect effective policing.
He explained that it is on this basis that the Police was asking for a restraining order.
Lawyer for Arise Ghana, Godwin Tameklo disagreed.
He insisted the Police have no power under the law to determine at which time a protest should take place.
He accused the Police yet again of acting in bad faith and going against its arrangement with the group. He said the organizers had initially wanted to stage a 48hour non-stop protest but later conceded to end at 3pm and 5pm on day one and two respectively.
The Court presided over by Justice Tasiame decided to grant the request by the Police partially by fixing the said timelines and routes.
Latest Stories
-
Liverpool reject £21.7m Inter Milan offer for Jones
12 minutes -
Ten-man Belgium held by Iran in second World Cup draw
22 minutes -
Doku criticised over plan to return home for birth
33 minutes -
Lamine Yamal shows why this could be his World Cup
42 minutes -
Serena Williams to make singles comeback at Wimbledon
53 minutes -
Meloni tells Trump to ‘focus on your own popularity’ as row escalates
1 hour -
World Cup still waits for real Brazil to show up
1 hour -
Mahama jokes about Father’s Day gifts, compares bouquet haul to First Lady’s Mother’s Day surprise
1 hour -
NCPTA backs ban on extravagant school graduations, calls for return to discipline, character building
2 hours -
Ghana ranked 1st in Africa with highest policy rate; cost of credit most expensive
2 hours -
Central Regional NADMO gives residents in dilapidated buildings 14 days to evacuate
2 hours -
Bibiani NPP members call for regional chairman’s resignation over disqualification of aspirants
2 hours -
Cloudy conditions, intermittent rains to persist nationwide – GMet
2 hours -
Zenith SME Business Empowerment Lab urges SMEs to adapt, innovate and thrive in a changing economy
3 hours -
T-bills: Government record 20% undersubscription; interest rates continue to rise
3 hours