Audio By Carbonatix
The Minority in Parliament has accused the government of showing “blatant disregard” for the other arms of government by agreeing with the United States to receive third-country nationals without seeking parliamentary approval.
At a press conference on Wednesday, September 24, the Minority said the deal undermines the authority of Parliament and violates Article 75 of the 1992 Constitution, which requires that any treaty, agreement, or convention with another country must be ratified by Parliament before implementation.
“The fact that we the minority members on the Foreign Affairs Committee had to learn of this development in the media is very concerning, and is consistent with attempts by the Executive to disregard the other arms of Government,” the caucus stressed.
The Minority described the government’s decision as “a repeat of past unconstitutional acts,” recalling the 2016 Guantanamo Bay detainee case in which the Supreme Court ruled that government’s action was unconstitutional because the agreement had not been ratified by Parliament.
They also cited the Banful v. Attorney-General case, where the Court held that every agreement between Ghana and another state, regardless of its form, requires parliamentary approval.
“It is, therefore, surprising that the current Government, which superintended over this unconstitutional act that was pronounced upon by the Supreme Court, would once again enter into a similar agreement with the same United States and proceed to receive foreign nationals into our country, pursuant to the said agreement, without regard to the clear constitutional requirement,” the Minority said.
The caucus expressed alarm that despite legal and constitutional concerns, government was preparing to receive more deportees.
“We have learnt that some of these foreign nationals are being held in detention centres against their wishes, and have gone ahead to institute legal action against the Government for breaches of their fundamental human rights.
"Despite this, we are told that some 40 more people are due to arrive in the country pursuant to this same unconstitutional agreement.”
The Minority reiterated that the government must suspend the arrangement immediately until Parliament has exercised its constitutional mandate. They further called for transparency on the processes and safeguards in place, warning that the deal raises wider concerns about sovereignty, security, and Ghana’s foreign policy posture.
Latest Stories
-
World Cup fever meets power anxiety: Ho residents plead for stable electricity
10 minutes -
Nii Lante Vanderpuye ready to contest NDC chairmanship if Asiedu Nketia steps aside
13 minutes -
Government to begin paying Free SHS suppliers’ arrears next week
16 minutes -
CSOs urge Supreme Court to uphold legality of Special Prosecutor’s office
19 minutes -
Mahama won’t shield Sedina Tamakloe from justice – Vanderpuye
22 minutes -
GMet proposes Authority status under new legislative framework
26 minutes -
Kpone Katamanso MCE condemns cattle invasion of school after viral video
29 minutes -
Speaker Bagbin calls for closer Parliament-Judiciary ties as Supreme Court marks 150 years
32 minutes -
World Blood Donor Day: Ghana celebrates humanity behind every drop of blood
35 minutes -
Mahama calls for new Ghana-EU partnership driven by trade, investment and industrialisation
38 minutes -
I’m not the president’s appointee; my allegiance is to MPs and Ghana – Speaker
41 minutes -
Fisheries Minister launches project to transform abandoned pits into fish farms
44 minutes -
Ghana-Canada investment forum to deepen economic cooperation
47 minutes -
Ashanti GNAT calls for calm over Nyinahin Catholic SHS teacher-student incident
51 minutes -
PBC workers call on Mahama to fulfil promise to revamp company
54 minutes