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A Constitutional review panel has noted that the review the 1992 Constitution should be done cautiously to avoid a blanket review. They called for a piecemeal approach to the national exercise in order not to do anything detrimental to growth of democracy and good governance. The panelist expressed these views at a forum organized by the National Commission on Civic Education (NCCE) as part of activities marking the 10th Annual Constitution Week celebration in Accra. They held the view that it is important for Ghana to ensure the durability of the constitution to deepen Ghana's fledgling democracy. The forum, which brought together participants from academia, judiciary, legislature, civil society organizations and identifiable bodies, was on the topic: "Can Our Present Constitutional Framework Accelerate the Growth and Sustenance of Democracy and Good Governance in Ghana." Mrs Betty Mould Iddrisu, Attorney General and Minister of Justice noted that the constitution has served Ghana for well over 18 years, ushering the country into democratic dispensation. The document, she said, as presently drafted and operationalised cannot promote the governance ideal intended. She said it is time to review the operation of the constitution in order to make it more scientific and promote conscious decisions on the governance architecture of the country. Mrs Iddrisu noted that the exercise could lead to the resolutions of the many problems that now confront the country, "given the immense benefit of experience that now guides us". "The exercise is meant to give us all the opportunity to take a second look at the operation of the constitution and to determine the amendments or modification. The decision is ours to make, not government." Professor Kofi Quashigah, Dean of the Faculty of Law, University of Ghana (UG) said even though the constitution needed periodical changes, it should not under go total review. He urged that the Judiciary should be given the opportunity to let the constitution grow. Prof. Quashigah added that reviewing the constitution means the country recognizes its peculiar circumstances and questions whether the Constitutional Review Commission is the right body to decide what the people want in their constitution and if the nation is politically sophisticated to address all the issues to be amended in the document. Dr Vladmir Antwi Danso, a lecturer at UG, said the constitutional review should hasten slowly because changes in certain provisions in the document would not lead to growth in democracy and good governance if deliberative politics is not encouraged. Source: GNA

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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.