
Audio By Carbonatix
Former Chief of Staff and lawyer, Nana Ato Dadzie has expressed disappointment in the Supreme Court's decision to dismiss the election petition filed by former President John Mahama.
Speaking to JoyNews, Mr Dadzie indicated that the petition presented before the apex court sought to question the figures purported by the Electoral Commission, therefore, the Justices could have permitted Chairperson Jean Mensa to mount the witness box.
He told Winston Amoah: "This matter was essentially a question of figures, whether the figures are right or wrong. If the person who has all the figures stays out, that is where the problem begins. I think am disappointed because I thought the court could have even exercised its own discretion to compel the EC.
"If two people are contesting over a figure or an issue, and there is a third person who holds the answer or the item, what do you do? You bring that third person in to find out if A is right or B is right."
According to him, the Supreme Court has missed an opportunity based on its decision, to make an opening for some interventions to ensuring there is a clear resolution of the issues at stake.
Mr Ato Dadzie further noted that the rules governing Ghana's legal practice make room for the court itself to call in a witness to assist the case.
He added: "This is a civil case. I mean with all due respect to the learned Supreme court, I am not contesting their judgement in that sense I am entitled to my opinion but this is a civil case and you hear the issues on the balance of probabilities. I mean, a submission of no case in a civil case is even rare.
"The court too has said so. I mean on such a competitive situation like this you do not go straight, I don't think we should have gone straight with the purely legal procedural approach that we did."
He iterated that it would "have been fair to have the EC Chair brought in" as an active participant in the election petition trial.
"The Supreme Court in its wisdom could probably have said 'okay, we throw it back to you, find a way of looking at the results again.' What would have been wrong with that.
"I think they could have been innovative, broken new grounds for us to move away from the purely legalistic approach to find a way of reconciling the issues and then they could have come back with the results.
"They asked the accounting firm to go and reconcile the issues and bring it back. So what was wrong, why couldn't we do it this time around. That is my problem," he stated.
Latest Stories
-
We can tackle multiple priorities – Sam George defends Anti-LGBTQ Bill push
7 minutes -
Statement: Ghana Chamber of Mines’ Response to Claims in Joe Jackson’s “Ananse Stories about the Economy of Ghana”
9 minutes -
GES opens 2026 teacher recruitment for licensed B.Ed graduates
11 minutes -
Ghana must value skilled trades, build resilient learners — Ibn Chambas
19 minutes -
Ghana must rethink education around relevance, resilience and responsibility — Ibn Chambas
22 minutes -
Prince Harry faces defamation lawsuit from charity he co-founded
24 minutes -
South Korea deploys thermal cameras to track escaped zoo wolf
25 minutes -
Calls for royal meeting with Epstein survivors grow ahead of US visit
29 minutes -
Ibn Chambas advocates blend of technology and human values in education
30 minutes -
UMA improves healthcare access in Asutifi North with GH₵700k ‘Kim Taylor Legacy’ Walkway
35 minutes -
Scholarships Authority and Fanaka University offer sponsorship for procurement and supply chain studies
38 minutes -
Bisa Kdei drops new single ‘Go N Look’ featuring Medikal
45 minutes -
Benin facing rising terrorism in north as French military presence faces growing criticism
46 minutes -
UEW Public Lecture Series 2026: Education debate ‘about the soul of Ghana’s future’ — Dr Ibn Chambas
47 minutes -
EU fingerprint and photo travel rules come into force from today
1 hour