Audio By Carbonatix
In a rather tense episode on Tuesday, November 28, there was a clash between the Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, and Communications Minister Ursula Owusu-Ekuful.
This occurred after yet another attempt by the Minister of Trade to lay the controversial Import Restrictions Bill that seeks to empower the Trade Ministry to approve or disapprove the importation of a list of products.
Ursula, the Ablekuma West MP questioned the Speaker's directive on the matter, especially after the Minority in Parliament had expressed opposition to the laying of the Bill.
From her perspective, there was nothing before the house that justified such an opposition.
“I have no idea on what we are debating in this house today. There is nothing before the house so as you [Speaker of Parliament] indicated to the Minister [of Trade, KT Hammond] that we are not yet there, I was of the opinion that you would tell my colleagues on the other side that there’s nothing before us.”
Unsatisfied with the situation, the Speaker admonished her and instructed her to return to her seat. He cautioned her that such actions would not be tolerated in the house in the future.
“Minister, do you really listen to yourself when you are talking? If you were here from the very beginning before we started, why did you say no, when I asked if you were here from the beginning… This is not the Ministry of Communications, this is Parliament. Resume your seat.”
Meanwhile, the Trade Minister, KT Hammond has now been cleared to lay the government's L.I. seeking to restrict the importation of selected products on Thursday, November 30.
Read also: Speaker clears way for laying of import restriction L.I. on Thursday
The Minority yet again opposed plans to lay it Tuesday, repeating the arguments that the L.I. is inimical to the general interest of Ghanaians and business people. They had also said it would breed corruption.
The Speaker was clear, however, that per the constitution, if the L.I. meets the constitutional test, then no one can block its laying
Consequently, the Speaker has asked KT Hammond to meet with the Subsidiary Legislation Committee again to cross their t's and dot their i's for the instrument to be laid on Thursday.
Latest Stories
-
Chamber of Mines rejects ‘colonial relic’ claim, defends Ghana’s mining fiscal regime
3 minutes -
NSA, Absa partner to roll out overdraft lifeline for National Service Personnel
5 minutes -
Ghana finalizes strategic roadmap for Dakar 2026 Youth Olympics
6 minutes -
AltAir Logistics unveils most affordable and value-packed packages for World Cup 2026
14 minutes -
Ahmed Ibrahim warns contractors against shoddy work on 24-Hour Economy market projects
18 minutes -
Construction of 20-kilometre Adankwame-Ntensere road to be completed soon – Atwima Nwabiagya North MP
23 minutes -
24-hour markets to transform Ghana’s economy, set for completion within two years – Ahmed Ibrahim
25 minutes -
NDC inherited a dysfunctional local government sector – Ahmed Ibrahim
28 minutes -
Some vendors in Ellembelle reject ¢0.20 coins for business transactions
30 minutes -
Release of GH¢5m to MMDAs in 2025 is unprecedented – Local Gov’t Minister
33 minutes -
Chiefs deserve better compensation for their role in development – Local Gov’t Minister
36 minutes -
Rebel Wilson’s claims against actress are ‘malicious concoctions’, Australian court hears
37 minutes -
Mahama warns against interference in public sector discipline
38 minutes -
OSP lacks independent prosecutorial power – Deputy Attorney-General insists
41 minutes -
Parliament Accounts Officer linked to over GH¢139k payroll irregularity
45 minutes