Audio By Carbonatix
A lecturer at the University of Professional Studies, Accra (UPSA), Dr Kwabena Bomfeh Jnr, has cautioned against what he described as excessive political noise surrounding the case of former Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta.
He argued that successful prosecution depends on due diligence, patience and adherence to legal processes rather than public pressure and political rhetoric.
Mr Ofori-Atta remains in federal custody in a case that now hinges on extradition evidence and strict legal deadlines, with the matter attracting intense public and political debate.
Speaking on JoyNews’ Newsfile programme on Saturday, January 24, Dr Bomfeh stressed that the pursuit of justice must be guided by professionalism and respect for due process, rather than what he termed political “hollabaloo.”
“To get successful prosecution requires due diligence, patience, soberness, tact and diligence, not the political noise,” he said.
He criticised public commentary that, in his view, seeks to reduce the complex legal process to simplistic demands for the former minister to be physically present in Ghana.
He warned that such an approach misunderstands how justice systems operate.
“This hollabaloo — Ken must come, if he doesn’t come, as if we are disabled by law to get to justice,” Dr Bomfeh stated.
According to him, accountability should not be measured solely by whether a suspect is physically present but by whether legal processes are being properly followed and whether formal responses to charges have been submitted.
“The overall question is accountability. My understanding was that he is even represented by lawyers in this matter,” he noted.
Dr Bomfeh said the more important issues for the public and political actors should be whether the legal team has formally responded to the allegations and how those responses address the charges.
“And the question I am asking is, have they responded to the charges that have been levelled against him? Those are the issues that are to be of concern to us. And what are their responses?” he asked.
He further warned against portraying the exercise of constitutional rights as an attempt to evade justice, arguing that such framing undermines the principles of the rule of law.
“So why is it that we are making it as if, if that person is exercising his right under our very Constitution, then he is running away from accountability?” Dr Bomfeh queried.
The UPSA lecturer said public discourse should focus less on political posturing and more on strengthening institutions to ensure that investigations, prosecutions, and extradition processes are handled professionally and within the law.
Latest Stories
-
Ukraine condemns ‘brutal’ Russian strikes ahead of second day of peace talks
12 minutes -
Mandela’s prison key, sunglasses and shirt can be sold after daughter wins court battle
14 minutes -
GES cautions public against fake recruitment letter circulating on social media
16 minutes -
Prof. Gyampo welcomes joint task force and currency stability to support transport sector
20 minutes -
Kennedy Agyapong campaign team says peace pact was not received before NPP signing
21 minutes -
Roads Minister urges chiefs to monitor road contractors as Mahama pushes infrastructure completion
25 minutes -
Police arrest 38-year-old man over suspected narcotics in a GHS vehicle
31 minutes -
2,949 killed in 14,743 road crashes in 2025 – NRSA
39 minutes -
Inusah Fuseini: Ofori-Atta’s wife confronted ex-AG Gloria Akuffo over ‘slow’ NDC trial pace under Akufo-Addo
1 hour -
Joy FM’s Strong and Sassy has a new host, aKorfa
2 hours -
Bawa Rock Ltd donates GH₵200k to KATH to support indigent patients
2 hours -
‘I have great sympathy for Ken Ofori-Atta’ – Inusah Fuseini
2 hours -
CIMG urges all practising marketers to regularise status under Ghana’s marketing law
2 hours -
GES warns public against fake recruitment letter circulating on social media
2 hours -
Joy FM’s Home Affairs moves to 5:30am on Saturdays: same conversations, same impact
2 hours
