Audio By Carbonatix
Lead counsel for John Dramani Mahama, Tsatsu Tsikata has accused the Electoral Commission Chairperson, Jean Mensa of evading cross-examination.
This was after lawyers for the EC and President Akufo-Addo had indicated that they do not intend to open their defence or call witnesses.
The submission by the counsels for the 1st and 2nd Respondent follows the cross-examination of three witnesses testifying on behalf of the 2020 NDC presidential candidate.
Mr. Mahama had filed witness statements for the NDC's General Secretary, Johnson Asiedu Nketia, Dr. Kpessa-Whyte and Rojo Mettle-Nunoo.
These individuals were subsequenly cross-examined by lawyers for President Akufo-Addo and the EC.
Following the discharge of Rojo Mettle-Nunoo, Lawyer Tsikata informed the court that the petitioner had closed his case.
But in an interesting twist, the lawyers for the respondents who had already indicated that they will call one witness each told the court they have rescinded that decision.
The two counsels argued that the evidence presented by the witnesses for the petitioner and from cross-examination does not support the reliefs being requested by Mr. Mahama in the petition filed.
Citing Order 36 Rule 43 and C.I 87 rule 3 (e) 5, lead counsel for the EC, Justin Amenuvor told the 7-member panel of judges that the EC was satisfied with proceedings so far and asked the court to make a determination on the petition before it.
But Tsatsu Tsikata disagreed.
He alleged that the move by the 1st and 2nd Respondents is a deliberate attempt by the EC Chairperson, Jean Mensa to avoid cross examination which will expose the illegalities that characterised the December 7 elections.
Explaining further, Lawyer Tsikata also said the request by the counsel for the Respondent was not in line with Order 36 Rule 43 and CI 87 rule 3 (e) 5 as stated.
But the judges sided with the respondents, adding that the witnesses cannot be compelled to testify.
The case has since been adjourned to Tuesday, February 9 for legal arguments on whether or not the respondents can opt not to call witnesses.
Latest Stories
-
Ryanair investigated over charging parents to sit with children
12 minutes -
South Korea fines Coupang over $400m after massive data breach affecting 30 million customers
13 minutes -
2026 World Cup: Semenyo needs to be the difference-maker for Black Stars – Marcel Desailly
16 minutes -
US and Iran exchange fresh strikes as fragile ceasefire collapses into renewed conflict
23 minutes -
Sinapi Aba mentorship programme equips 300 MSMEs for business growth and job creation
27 minutes -
JD Vance says Netanyahu “has gotten some things wrong” as US-Israel tensions surface
38 minutes -
Kow Essuman accuses Mahama gov’t of discriminatory treatment over staff salary arrears
42 minutes -
Non-tariff barriers add 20% to cost of cross-border trade in West Africa – Elizabeth Ofosu-Adjare
43 minutes -
Wontumi seeks plea deal in GH¢30m Exim Bank fraud trial — AG notifies High Court
49 minutes -
Mahama gov’t breached law by failing to submit 2024 staffing report – Kow Essuman
53 minutes -
Bridging traditional banking and emerging fintech ecosystems across Africa
1 hour -
CSIR-SARI bemoans low demand for locally developed seedlings amid imported alternatives
1 hour -
Cracks emerge on Tema Motorway Interchange as motorists raise durability concerns
1 hour -
Kow Essuman challenges Presidency’s narrative on staff numbers, demands disclosure of records
1 hour -
Chief Imam Sheikh Sharubutu warns against rising drug abuse ahead of 2026 World Drug Day
1 hour