Audio By Carbonatix
The Dean of the University Of Ghana School Of Law, Raymond Atuguba has disapproved of the Ministry of Chieftaincy for justifying the President's request for chiefs to stand when greeting him.
Speaking on JoyNews’ AM Show on Thursday, May 2, he said the Chieftaincy Ministry should know better and should not have released a letter justifying the President’s request.
The comment is in response to a statement by the Minister for Chieftaincy and Religious Affairs, Stephen Asamoah Boateng explaining that the President’s request “is not intended to undermine the dignity or autonomy of traditional leaders."
Recently, an incident occurred at a ceremony in Damongo, where President Akufo-Addo's bodyguards instructed a traditional ruler to stand up and greet him.
Before this, a video had surfaced showing President Akufo-Addo instructing chiefs at a funeral to rise before shaking hands with him.
According to the statement signed by Mr Boateng, chiefs standing up to greet the President “is a recognition of their esteemed role in Ghanaian society by embracing the Head of State, thereby showing brotherly love and mutual respect.”
But responding to this, Prof Atuguba said chiefs hold absolute authority and power within their traditional domain and therefore deserve the utmost respect from the President.
“It shouldn’t be coming from the Chieftaincy Ministry. They should know better. They should know that whoever goes to the palace of the Asantehene should not expect the Asantehene to rise for him.
"They should know that whoever goes to the palace of the Okyehene should not expect the Okyehene to rise for him. Whoever goes to the palace of the Yagbonwura should not expect the Yagbonwura to rise for him,” he said.
Prof Atuguba stated that the Constitution guarantees certain usages and customs, and anyone who visits a traditional domain must adhere to these customs.
According to him, every traditional chief, no matter how small their domain, holds authority and respect within their jurisdiction.
“The littlest chief in Ghana, when he or she presides over a traditional ceremony is boss and even the president within that traditional ceremony is subject to that littlest chief. The situation changes when you move to the international conference centre and Independence Square.”
“When you go there, no one can take precedence over the president, vice president, speaker of parliament and the chief justice. No, because that is a formal event that comes under Article 57(2) of the constitution.
"At that point, all the chiefs including the biggest chiefs in Ghana must rise for the president and the others in that order of precedence, he said.”
Latest Stories
-
Kofi Bentil praises Afenyo-Markin’s leadership style but calls it combative
16 minutes -
NDC’s demolishing exercises will feature in 2028 election – Adom Otchere
38 minutes -
“I was hoping for 60%” – Paul Adom-Otchere on Dr Bawumia’s flagbearer win
56 minutes -
Africa’s growth depends on empowering SMEs, women and youth – CEO of Telecel Group
1 hour -
Force for good in action: Absa’s colleague volunteerism in 2025
1 hour -
14-Year-old boy drowns at Fiapre Catholic Junction in Bono Region
1 hour -
KIA too big to be named after Kotoka – Kofi Bentil
1 hour -
NPP should be the last to talk about renaming national monuments – Atta Issah
2 hours -
Global tourism leaders to gather in Kenya to shape the future of tourism resilience
2 hours -
Smart Banking for a world on steroids: How integrated digital platforms are quietly redefining convenience
2 hours -
KIA: Lt. Gen. Kotoka did nothing for Ghana – Atta Issah
2 hours -
Senyo Hosi demands national framework for renaming public infrastructure
2 hours -
The Intentional Money Playbook: Winning with your personal finances in 2026 (Part II)
2 hours -
Paul Adom-Otchere reveals past proposal to rename Kotoka Airport after Kofi Annan
2 hours -
KIA: Gov’t proposed ‘Accra International Airport’, not Kwame Nkrumah International Airport – Atta Issah
2 hours
