Audio By Carbonatix
Three individuals believed to be sponsored by suspended NPP Chairman Paul Afoko have gone to court trying to stop the enforcement of his suspension.
The three are seeking an interlocutory injunction “to restrain them from holding out [Freddie Blay] as acting chairman of the party and convening and attending meetings without the purportedly suspended chairman of the party (Chairman Afoko) being the convenor of the meetings and to restrain the defendants from taking decisions in any meeting not convened by Chairman Afoko, until this dispute is finally determined.”
The applicants are Tweneboa Kodua Emmanuel, Stephen Owusu and Joseph Oppong, all from the Ashanti region.
They cited amongst others former President John Kufuor, NPP flagbearer Nana Akufo-Addo, acting party chairman Freddie Blay as respondents.
They are arguing that contrary to the NPP’s constitution (Article 9D), Mr Blay convened a National Executive Committee (NEC) on October 23, 2015 “to consider a purported report of the National Disciplinary Committee (hereinafter referred to as the ‘Committee’) on the National Chairman of the Party when the National Chairman is present, able and willing to convene same.”
The motion, filed at the Human Rights Court, said “the decision to suspend was communicated to the country (Ghana) through the media by the Communication Director of the” NPP Nana Akomea.
The applicants say the decision of NEC was later “conveyed to the national chairman by the Deputy General Secretary of the NPP.”
As Mr. Afoko’s lawyers have insisted, the processes leading to the Chairman’s suspension was unlawful and therefore void.
Sources say the General Secretary of the NPP, Kwabena Agyepong has already been served with the processes.
Meanwhile a Steering Committee is being held by the NPP and Afoko’s lawyers say they may cite the persons attending the meeting for contempt.
The case is yet to be heard on November 9, 2015.
Latest Stories
-
England players to make own call on Partey handshake ahead of Ghana showdown
1 hour -
Two Kristo Asafo members drag church to court over succession dispute
2 hours -
‘We believe in ourselves’ — Jordan Ayew ahead of England encounter
2 hours -
Queiroz: Teenage sensation Yirenkyi ready for big stage
3 hours -
Report says UK PM Starmer ready to quit, but source says he is still focused on the job
3 hours -
Bright Simons demands answers on 320kg meth seizure linked to Ghana
4 hours -
Fastest World Cup to 100 goals in 68 years – are balls and breaks behind it?
4 hours -
Gakpo and Brobbey at the double as Dutch sink Swedes
5 hours -
Colombia’s escalating, brutal internal conflict is defining its presidential election
5 hours -
Israeli strikes kill six people in Gaza including Al Jazeera cameraman, officials say
6 hours -
King Charles to reveal personal tax bill for first time as monarch
7 hours -
Substitute Undav scores twice as Germany reach last 32 with comeback win
7 hours -
How does qualification for the World Cup knockout stage work?
8 hours -
At least 15 migrant bodies wash ashore in eastern Libya, sources say
8 hours -
‘Electoral Commission appointments must come from parliament’ – Kofi Bentil
9 hours