Audio By Carbonatix
Government is in the process of drafting two new bills expected to reform legal education in Ghana, Parliament's Subsidiary Legislation Committee Chairman has revealed.
Mahama Ayariga said the "far-reaching" action will address concerns raised about the General Legal Council (GLC)'s Legislative Instrument (LI) before the House.
Some lawmakers have been mobilising their colleagues to scuttle the passage of the LI, describing it as hostile to legal education. They will need a two-thirds majority in the House to succeed.
Related Article: No more interviews at Ghana School of Law, GLC makes concession

With a day to the discussion of the LI in Parliament, the GLC has reached an agreement with the Committee to eliminate the interview session as an admission requirement at the Ghana School of Law.
Per the current arrangement, LLB students seeking to go to the School will be required to take an entrance examination after which the qualified candidates will be admitted.
The entrance examination and interview as admission requirements at the Law School were introduced in 2012 but the Supreme Court in 2017 held they were illegal.
The two are not in the Professional Law Course Regulations 1984 (LI 1296) that regulates law education in Ghana, the apex court said and directed the GLC to take steps to legalise the process.
Bawku Central MP, Mahama Ayariga
Speaking to Joy News' Joseph Ackah-Blay after a meeting Tuesday, Mr Ayariga said the GLC and government have agreed to work on some reforms at the Ghana School of Law.
"Unknown to us government has taken some far-reaching decisions in this regard and the Deputy Attorney-General showed us a cabinet communication that approved a substantive bill which will be brought to parliament amending the parent legislation which is Act 32," he said.
He explained the LI is a direct response to the decision by the Supreme Court, which directed the GLC to amend LI1296 to include the interview session as an admission requirement.
Satisfied with government and GLC commitment towards legal education, Mr Ayariga believes his colleagues will have no reason to stampede the passage of the LI.
The fate of the LI will be known on Wednesday when Subsidiary Legislation Committee lays its report before the House.
Latest Stories
-
Three cargo ships attacked in Strait of Hormuz after Trump extends ceasefire
1 minute -
Publican AI is a move to reward political cronies – GUTA Secretary alleges
2 minutes -
Publican AI system harming trade, increasing import costs – GUTA Secretary
4 minutes -
US charges anti-extremism group over payments to informants in hate groups
9 minutes -
Thirteen killed in second India fireworks blast in three days
9 minutes -
Economy faced significant slowdown in liquidity expansion in 2025 – BoG
14 minutes -
Banks cut significantly loans to real sector, still prefers T-bills – BoG
18 minutes -
South Korean fighter jets collided due to pilots snapping pictures, report finds
18 minutes -
Ghana Beverage Awards celebrates 10th Anniversary in grand style
26 minutes -
Stakeholders were not consulted before Publican AI rollout at ports – GUTA
29 minutes -
Heath Goldfields rejects ‘misleading’ claims, affirms Bogoso-Prestea operations ongoing
30 minutes -
Mentorship shaped my communications career – Sammi Awuku
33 minutes -
Bad roads in Atonsu Bokro force residents to carry sick, elderly to hospital
51 minutes -
Cabinet approves visa waiver agreements with Zambia, Maldives and Antigua and Barbuda
52 minutes -
Oil prices dip as Trump extends Iran war ceasefire
1 hour