Audio By Carbonatix
A member of the Defence and Interior Committee of Parliament has welcomed government's decision to withdraw the controversial spy bill laid before Parliament some months ago.
Alexander Afenyo Markins told Joy News "government has done the right thing by beating a retreat."
The Interception of Postal Packets and Telecommunication Messages Bill also known as the ‘Spy bill’ is geared towards fighting crimes in Ghana.
The Bill when passed into law will give the government the power to listen in, tap, and record conversations of private individuals.
Government has said the Bill is to help secure the citizens especially in the face of global terrorism by monitoring conversation of persons it suspects may be up to something illegal.
But some critics say they will not allow their privacy to be invaded. The Bill in its current form has been condemned severally by individuals and some civil society groups.
The critics fear government may abuse the law by listening in to conversations of opposition party leaders and other critics especially as the country goes into election.
There were a number of petitions before Parliament asking the House to stand down the Bill at least after thorough discussions have been held.
On Thursday, government appeared to have given a listening ear to the concerns of the critics with the Deputy Interior Minister announcing a withdrawal of the Bill from Parliament.
Mr Agalga said government will present the bill in an amended form which will take into consideration concerns of the people about the current bill.
Afenyo Markins has welcomed the decision. Whilst he agrees that security officials must take preemptive steps to prevent crimes by listening in to conversations of people who are threats to the state, he was quick to add that they must not do so by violating rights of people to privacy.
He said the part of the Bill which allows members of the national security to, on their own, exercise a discretion, invade privacy of people by listening in to calls without a court's order cannot be accepted.
If anything, Alexander Afenyo Markins, would rather the security officials seek express authority from a judge before proceeding to tap into people's calls.
He said government must be wary of the rights of the citizens.
Latest Stories
-
Five-year-old boy dies after getting caught in ski travelator
1 hour -
‘This is an abuse of trust’- PUWU-TUC slams gov’t over ECG privatisation plans
1 hour -
Children should be protected from home fires – GNFSÂ
1 hour -
Volta Regional Minister urges unity, respect for Chief Imam’s ruling after Ho central mosque shooting
1 hour -
$214M in gold-for-reserves programme not a loss, Parliament’s economy chair insists it’s a transactional cost
2 hours -
Elegant homes estate unveils ultra-modern sports complex in Katamanso
2 hours -
ECG can be salvaged without private investors -TUC Deputy Secretary-General
2 hours -
Two pilots killed after mid-air helicopter collision in New Jersey
2 hours -
2025 in Review: Fire, power and the weight of return (January – March)
2 hours -
Washington DC NPP chairman signals bid for USA chairmanship
3 hours -
Sheikh Ali Muniru remains Volta regional Imam, says National chief Imam
3 hours -
GoldBod CEO accuses Minority of hypocrisy over Gold-for-Reserves losses
3 hours -
Sammy Gyamfi to address alleged losses under gold for reserves programme on Jan 5
3 hours -
BoG–GoldBod $214m hit is design failure, not market loss – Minority
4 hours -
Festive season sees minor fires, but domestic cases hit 15–20 daily – GNFS
4 hours
