Audio By Carbonatix
The High Court in Accra has dismissed an application by former Deputy Executive Director of the National Service Authority (NSA), Gifty Oware-Mensah, seeking to halt her trial and refer constitutional issues to the Supreme Court, describing the request as “lacking merit.”
Presiding judge Justice Audrey Kocuvie-Tay ruled on Tuesday, February 10, 2026, that the defence had failed to demonstrate that a genuine constitutional question had arisen to warrant a referral for interpretation.
Ms Oware-Mensah had challenged the Practice Direction on Disclosure and Case Management Proceedings, 2018, arguing that provisions requiring an accused person to disclose the names and addresses of witnesses at the case management stage violated the presumption of innocence under Article 19 of the 1992 Constitution.
The application, filed by her lawyers led by Garry Nimako Marfo, was opposed by the prosecution, led by Director of Public Prosecutions, Yvonne Attakora Obuobisa, who maintained that the Practice Direction was consistent with the Constitution and designed to promote fair and expeditious trials.
In her ruling, Justice Kocuvie-Tay held that the accused had not shown that “a genuine question has arisen for the matter to be referred to the Supreme Court for interpretation,” and accordingly dismissed the application.
Following the ruling, Mr Nimako said the defence would apply for the full reasons and advise their client on the next steps.
“In regard to the application for a referral having been dismissed, we will apply for the full copy of the reasons for the dismissal and advise the client as to the way forward,” he said.
He disclosed that a Notice of Appeal had already been filed against an earlier order compelling the accused to file her witness list, adding that a motion for stay of proceedings had also been filed.
Justice Kocuvie-Tay consequently stayed proceedings and adjourned the case to February 18, 2026, to consider the application for stay.
Ms Oware-Mensah has pleaded not guilty to charges including stealing, willfully causing financial loss to the state, using public office for profit and money laundering, in relation to the alleged GH¢38 million National Service ghost names scandal, and is currently on GH¢10 million bail.
Latest Stories
-
Mobile tech to add $290bn to Africa’s economy by 2030, GSMA says
2 hours -
South Africa’s Ramaphosa warns against scapegoating migrants for economic woes
2 hours -
Oil prices fall 5% to 3-month low on hopes Strait of Hormuz will open
3 hours -
Prince George to attend Eton College from September
3 hours -
Cadbury chocolate-owner Mondelez defends staying in Russia
3 hours -
‘We fear for our lives’ – deadline for migrants to leave South Africa looms
3 hours -
Hungary’s MPs block return of Orbán, limiting rule of PM to eight years
3 hours -
Hundreds of cats stolen for food in Vietnam rescued by police, welfare group says
3 hours -
Brazil convicts Jair Bolsonaro’s son of pursuing US help in father’s legal battle
4 hours -
Musk’s SpaceX overtakes Amazon to become world’s fifth most valuable firm
4 hours -
2026 World Cup: What would Ghana lose without Thomas Partey against Panama?
4 hours -
German broadcaster removes TV intro after Elon Musk takes legal action
4 hours -
Haaland scored twice on World Cup debut as Norway beat Iraq
4 hours -
Spurs agree ÂŁ52m Van Hecke deal with Brighton
4 hours -
World Cup: The VAR call that dumbfounded the world’s best referees
4 hours