
Audio By Carbonatix
Some aspirants in the District Assembly elections are demanding a refund of their monies after a Supreme Court verdict crushed plans to hold the March 3rd elections.
An aspirant in the Efutu area in the Central region, Benjamin Ayi Mensah went to court after he was denied participation in the elections because he submitted his forms late.
In a landmark ruling, the Supreme Court has ruled that the entire election is unconstitutional because there is no law backing the process.
The ruling leaves one man happy and several thousands dejected, disappointed and depleted after weeks of strategising and campaigning, along with its attendant financing.

A frustrated aspirant told Joy News “some of us have to be paid.”
“They have the rules and they don’t work with the rules and regulations. They have to be charged,” he continued.
Another said, “immediately I heard this news, I have to go and find another money”. Another aspirant complained that he has used his personal money to finance the campaign and was planning a float on Saturday to round off his campaign.
All the perishable goods he bought for the float will now go waste as far as his campaign is concerned.
Local governance Expert George Kyei Bafour told Joy News the Electoral Commission has “wasted everybody’s time.”
“The integrity of the EC has come under scrutiny”, he said explaining that the commission had broken a “simple” constitutional provision.
The CI 85 became the Commission's undoing because the law on District Assembly demarcations needed to be passed by Parliament before the EC could open nominations.
But after the EC proceeded to open nominations without the maturing of the Constitutional Instrument, lawyer Afenyo Markins who represented Benjamin struck hard disassembling an entire electoral machine built on a false start.
The magnitude of the blow will lie in the local government's reality after March 21.
By that time the tenure of Assemblymen and women would have ended and over 20,000 vacancies will be left unfilled, grinding an entire local governance system to a historic halt.
Listen to audio
Latest Stories
-
Central Regional NADMO gives residents in dilapidated buildings 14 days to evacuate
22 minutes -
Bibiani NPP members call for regional chairman’s resignation over disqualification of aspirants
36 minutes -
Cloudy conditions, intermittent rains to persist nationwide – GMet
47 minutes -
Zenith SME Business Empowerment Lab urges SMEs to adapt, innovate and thrive in a changing economy
1 hour -
T-bills: Government record 20% undersubscription; interest rates continue to rise
1 hour -
Ghanaian medicinal plant shows potential to starve prostate tumours by blocking blood vessel growth
2 hours -
Emirates expands operations in Ghana with additional weekly flights
2 hours -
Tributes paid to ‘popular’ teenager killed in Donegal rally crash
2 hours -
Marigold Foundation distributes sanitary pads to 1,500 girls in Agona East
3 hours -
Two dead after building collapse at Gyagyaano in Cape Coast
3 hours -
Six arrested over Kwabenya shooting incident involving Adwoa Safo
3 hours -
Nana Kwadwo Safo Akofena I installed as new leader of Kristo Asafo Mission
3 hours -
Kristo Asafo Church refutes claims Adwoa Safo was shot by brother
4 hours -
Four dead, two critical after Metro Mass bus plunges into ditch on Peki stretch
5 hours -
Police reinforce security at Kwabenya following gunfire incident involving Adwoa Safo
5 hours