Audio By Carbonatix
Lawyers of the Judicial Service of Ghana have cautioned all media houses in the country to desist from publishing hateful, indecent and offensive statements against judges.
Their concern, they say "arises from the publication and/or permitting the publication of a series of incendiary, hateful and offensive statements, and speeches on their various platforms against the Justices.
"This concern has been heightened by the flurry of statements and speeches directed at our client's Justices, especially after the commencement of hearing of the election petition in the suit intituled John Dramani Mahama v Electoral Commission & Nana Addo," the statement read.
In the letter addressed to all media houses in the country, the legal counsel noted that publishing hateful and offensive stories against adjudicators threaten the democracy and peaceful nature of the country.
It further stated that some of these "publications directly insinuate that the decisions of the Justices presiding over the matter are motivated by factors outside legal principles and proper judicial consideration".
Of further concern to the justices is the fact that "The focus of the statements and speeches therefore patently insinuate that... the decisions are motivated by corrupt factors and devoid of any legal justification and/or reasoning."
It has, therefore, cautioned media houses that these "statements and speeches interfere with the due administration of justice as Justices of our client are threatened with ominous consequences following their decisions which do not meet the expectations of some members of the society.
“The statements and speeches bring the administration of justice into disrepute as unsuspecting Ghanaians are being deliberately misinformed and manipulated to believe that the justice system is perverted and lacking in credibility,” the letter read.
In conclusion, it drew the attention of the media to the Ghanaian population which "consists largely of uneducated or not very well-informed people", as such "it is necessary to take a stricter view of what criticism may be allowed of the justice system", because "although the administration of justice must suffer the respectful though outspoken [not inciteful, hateful or spiteful] comments of ordinary men, it must not be adversely interfered with and/or brought into dispute".
Latest Stories
-
Microsoft sued by shareholders over expenses, cloud business, AI
17 minutes -
US judge dismisses Musk’s xAI trade secret lawsuit against OpenAI
27 minutes -
Almost all of world’s children exposed to climate hazards, UN agency says
38 minutes -
Trump may release US-Iran agreement before Friday, Vance saysÂ
47 minutes -
Supreme Court to hear Trump appeal involving lengthy detention of certain immigrants
52 minutes -
Who Protects the Dreamer? Reflections on the vulnerability of the Girl Child
55 minutes -
Florida sues TikTok, claiming it violates state child safety law
1 hour -
US Supreme Court won’t hear bid by suspended judge, 98, to keep her job
1 hour -
World Cup: Uruguay equalise late to deny Saudi Arabia in stifling Miami
1 hour -
Adamus CEO Angela List elected First Vice President of Ghana Chamber of Mines
2 hours -
Eni Ghana, Italian Development Agency sign agreement to explore joint development projects
2 hours -
GCB Bank and VISA expand collaboration to deliver smarter, customer-centric payment solutions
2 hours -
South African TV star arrested after allegedly kidnapping man in girlfriend dispute
4 hours -
Married at First Sight Australia allegations ‘disturbing’, says country’s watchdog
4 hours -
South African jazz legend Abdullah Ibrahim dies at 91
4 hours