Audio By Carbonatix
Political Science lecturer at the University of Ghana, Prof Ransford Gyampo believes that it will not be advisable for the Electoral Commission to grant the request of the Seventh Day Adventist Church (SDA) to change the date for the 2024 general elections.
Speaking on Newsfile on JoyNews, he explained that agreeing to change the date, December 7, which falls on a Saturday, to another day can open a floodgate for equally similar requests in the future.
“With the greatest of respect to them, Ghana is our constitution that guarantees the free expression of our religion. At the same time, the constitution says we are a secular state. And so if it is a secular state, people have the right to exercise their religion, but this must not be exercised in a manner that sort of projects their religious beliefs and faith and ideals over those of the other people who also have different religious beliefs and faith and ideals.”
“So the point is that given that it is a secular state any day is fine. Otherwise, if we allow this tomorrow if election day is on Friday, Muslims will tell us that, well, they go to the mosque on Friday and go, we shouldn't. If it falls on Sunday, you have a ponderance, majority of Ghanaians being Christian, they may say that it is going to disturb the day selected to worship their God.”
Prof Gyampo said that although voting is a national duty, it should be a choice for people to decide whether or not they would vote or choose to exercise their religious duty instead.
“So long as the fundamental laws of the land says you’re a secular country, we should be careful not to allow all religious beliefs and sects to also come in making pleas and demands.”
“Today it is SDA if it is granted, tomorrow it will be Harikrishnas, Muslims, Christians and it creates a state of confusion and a state of factionalism in the body politics. It's not something that we should encourage.”
This comes after the Seventh-day Adventist Church made a case for an amendment to the 2024 December 7 election date which falls on a Saturday.
The church, in separate petitions, first to the Electoral Commission, recommended the elections be moved from the conventional December 7 because the date falls on a Saturday, which will conflict with Sabbath, a holy day dedicated to the worship of God.
The church says the first or second Tuesday will be more convenient to promote inclusive democracy.
Additionally, the Church is taking steps by sending another petition to the Attorney General and pushing for an amendment of the constitutional provisions which restricts the period of organizing parliamentary and presidential elections in Ghana.
Latest Stories
-
BoG Governor Johnson Asiama pushes for changes to IMF support for member countries
27 minutes -
Ghana Insurers Association backs SIGA’s integrating policy as a strategic pathway for sector growth
35 minutes -
‘Physically attractive’ comment sparks outrage – FIDA accuses judge of gender bias
56 minutes -
IMF revises Ghana’s growth rate for 2026 to 4.8%, inflation at 7.9% despite global economic pressures
1 hour -
Energy Minister John Jinapor likely to suspend some fuel margins today
2 hours -
King Charles will not meet Epstein survivors on US visit
2 hours -
Fela makes history as first African to be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
2 hours -
Nigerian music industry wasn’t fair to me – Kcee opens up
2 hours -
Why I changed my mind not to womanise – Singer Lojay
2 hours -
Nollywood actor, Patrick Doyle loses newborn baby daughter
2 hours -
He campaigned on it – Catholic Bishops’ president challenges Mahama on LGBTQ priority claim
3 hours -
LGBTQ law not important to him – Bishop Gyamfi accuses Mahama of undermining public will
3 hours -
LGBTQ Bill: You can’t trade jobs for values – Bishop Gyamfi rejects govt’s priority argument
3 hours -
Dangerous signal – Bishop Gyamfi warns Mahama is not taking LGBTQ bill seriously
4 hours -
Founder of China’s Evergrande pleads guilty to fraud
4 hours