Audio By Carbonatix
Judicial Secretary, Musah Ahmed, says the judiciary has put in place a comprehensive system designed to tackle the long-standing problem of case delays — one that combines the newly established Specialised High Court Division with afternoon courts to significantly reduce the workload on individual judges.
Ahmed made the remarks on The Law on Joy News, providing the most detailed explanation yet of how the reforms introduced by Chief Justice Paul Baffoe-Bonnie will work in practice.
"The system we are creating has taken care of all those delays," Ahmed said. "We have put in place now a new system which seeks to transform the system where one particular judge is given different subject matters to try, for which reason he's touching on various subjects before him, which could lead to inefficiency and delays."
At the heart of the new approach is a simple but significant shift: reducing the number of cases before any single judge. Ahmed explained that afternoon courts will play a key role in this, with cases redistributed from morning sessions to afternoon court judges to ease the burden on their counterparts handling the morning docket — including those sitting in the specialised courts.
"What we are doing now is to reduce the number of cases before a particular judge. This then calls for the establishment of the afternoon courts so that we will push a number of those cases to the afternoon court judges to try them," he said.
The old model, Ahmed argued, was a recipe for slowness. A judge juggling different subject matters across unrelated cases — from land disputes to financial crimes to cybersecurity — could not reasonably be expected to deliver swift, focused decisions. The new model flips that logic entirely.
Under the reformed system, judges in the Specialised High Court Division are assigned cases within a defined subject area.
"These are assigned specific cases; they effectively deal with them as a subject, and then they dispose of them with dispatch," Ahmed explained.
The Specialised High Court Division, formally established through a Chief Justice circular on February 5, 2026, covers corruption and public accountability, natural resources and galamsey, state asset recovery, and organised crime and security.
Complementing this, the Chief Justice ordered that High Court offices remain open from 8:00 am to 6:30 pm on weekdays — creating the operational window needed to run both morning and afternoon court sessions effectively.
The reforms come amid years of public frustration over how long it takes Ghanaian courts to resolve high-profile cases, particularly those involving corruption and galamsey. Cases that have dragged on for years with little movement have eroded public trust in the justice system, making the pressure on the judiciary to act both immense and urgent.
The Judicial Service is also revising the Rules of Court, expected to come into force by March 2026, alongside technological innovations to further enhance the delivery of justice.
Latest Stories
-
T-bills auction: Interest rates fell sharply to 6.4%; government exceeds target by 170%
29 minutes -
Weak consumption, high unemployment rate pose greater threat to economic recovery – Databank Research
1 hour -
Godfred Arthur nets late winner as GoldStars stun Heart of Lions
2 hours -
2025/26 GPL: Chelsea hold profligate Hearts in Accra
2 hours -
Number of jobs advertised decreased by 4% to 2,614 in 2025 – BoG
2 hours -
Passenger arrivals at airport, land borders declined in 2025 – BoG
2 hours -
Total revenue and grant misses target by 6.7% to GH¢187bn in 2025
2 hours -
Africa’s top editors converge in Nairobi to tackle media’s toughest challenges
4 hours -
Specialised courts, afternoon sittings to tackle case delays- Judicial Secretary
4 hours -
Specialised high court division to be staffed with trained Judges from court of appeal — Judicial Secretary
5 hours -
Special courts will deliver faster, fairer justice — Judicial Secretary
5 hours -
A decade of dance and a bold 10K dream as Vivies Academy marks 10 years
5 hours -
GCB’s Linus Kumi: Partnership with Ghana Sports Fund focused on building enduring systems
6 hours -
Sports is preventive healthcare and a wealth engine for Ghana – Dr David Kofi Wuaku
6 hours -
Ghana Sports Fund Deputy Administrator applauds GCB’s practical training for staff
6 hours
