Audio By Carbonatix
The National House Chiefs (NHC) in collaboration with the Law Reform Commission has researched into customary law on land and family in twenty traditional areas aimed at evolving a unified system of rules of customary law in the country.
This project, Ascertainment and Codification of Customary Law Project (ACCLP) is being funded by the German Development Cooperation (GTZ).
Findings from Kaleo and Nandom Traditional Areas in the Upper West Region which were sampled during the pilot study were validated at a two-day workshop at Wa for Paramount Chiefs and land owners in the region.
Mrs. Sheila Minkah-Premo, a Resource Person, in a presentation, said legal certainty was crucial for peace and stability in the country.
She said where customary lands covered about 60 to 80 per cent of the territory many conflicts could arise over land ownership, utilization and management as well as the scope of customary land rights leading to feuds between families and clans.
She said the codification of customary law would contribute directly to private sector development, agriculture and industrial enterprise and also support the decentralization process and land use planning for district development.
Ascertained and codified customary land titles, she noted would provide a strong foundation for improved extra-judicial, pre-trial and conflict resolution and reduce the case load in the judicial system.
Mr. Thomas Tagoe, National Research Coordinator of the project, said Customary laws for the pilot areas were being ascertained, validated and codified and lessons learnt documented for future use.
In the second phase, he said, additional variations of customary laws from about 30 traditional areas in the ten regions would be collected on land and family law while the third phase would be for validation, codification, consultation and harmonization.
Dr. Seidu Danaa, Head of Research at the Chieftaincy Secretariat, said twelve Legislative Instruments (LIs) emanating from the Ministry of Culture and Chieftaincy were studied by the Attorney-General's Department.
He expressed the hope that the numerous conflicts with regard to land ownership, succession to stools and skins would minimise when the LIs are approved by Parliament.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Australian-based audiologist donate hearing aids to Ghanaians in need
4 hours -
MobileMoney Fintech Ltd enhances regulatory compliance to protect customers and strengthen reliable agent network
4 hours -
Deborah Okailey Quarcoo: Are girls born to have dreams or just to marry
5 hours -
Sanity is your greatest asset – Alsale CEO Nana Boakye Kanto urges Ghanaians
5 hours -
GRA applauds KGL Group for paying GH¢153m in taxes, urges nationwide compliance
5 hours -
Ghana to host 30-man Zambian delegation to forge FinTech and cybersecurity alliances
5 hours -
Pilot International charters historic 1st club in Africa; launches Pilot International Club of Accra, Ghana
5 hours -
Canadian High Commissioner warns World Cup ticket does not guarantee Visa
5 hours -
Ghana to open diplomatic mission in Singapore to boost trade, investment and cooperation
5 hours -
I don’t want to die without a trace – Alsale CEO Nana Boakye Kanto on building a legacy
5 hours -
Ghana, Italy deepen cybersecurity cooperation to safeguard digital future
6 hours -
‎Communications Minister explores partnership with Code Raccoon to boost digital training
6 hours -
FirstBank Ghana holds maiden edition of SME Connect Workshop
6 hours -
‎Communications Minister holds talks with Ugandan delegation on continental parliamentary conference
6 hours -
Honouring 51 Years of Legal Excellence: Mr. Tsatsu Tsikata, Ghana’s King of Law, and the Voice of Justice
6 hours