Audio By Carbonatix
Former President of the Ghana Bar Association (GBA), Sam Okudzeto, has criticised the process leading to the passage of the Legal Education Bill, 2025, saying the Association was sidelined in a major reform affecting the legal profession.
Parliament passed the bill last week, marking a significant shift in Ghana’s legal education system.
The legislation, now awaiting presidential assent, ends the Ghana School of Law's monopoly and allows accredited universities to provide professional legal training.
It also establishes a Council for Legal Education and Training to regulate the system and standardise curricula nationwide.
But speaking on Joy News' PM Express, Okudzeto said the exclusion of the Bar from the process raises serious concerns.
“I had one complaint in the first place when this bill was proposed, the Ghana Bar Association (GBA) was not involved at all, which I thought was rather strange,” he said.
He argued that the GBA, as the professional body representing lawyers across the country, should have been consulted before such a major decision.
“One would have thought that this matter should have been referred to the GBA for their input, because they are the members of the profession,” he noted.
Okudzeto stressed that the Association’s structure reflects nationwide representation, making its input critical in reforms of this scale.
“and it has a council, which is composed of regional presidents and a secretary from each of the regions who are all members of the council. And therefore you can see that it’s a body that is not Accra or Kumasi matter, it’s nationwide,” he explained.
Despite efforts to engage Parliament, he said the opportunity never materialised.
“I think an application was made to Parliament for us to have an interview with the council, and it was never fulfilled. We now heard that the law had been passed, so that’s a serious matter,” he said.
He maintained that professional bodies must be central to decisions affecting their fields.
“Moreso, my view is that when we are talking about a profession, it means that anytime parliament is confronted with an issue relating to a profession, Parliament should get the professional body to be involved,” he added.
Latest Stories
-
Twice in a year, Chairman Wontumi’s lead lawyer has walked away
34 minutes -
Telecel launches Ashanti Codes to equip youth with digital and AI skills
1 hour -
Abronye DC granted permission to travel to UK for master’s programme
1 hour -
Government has stabilised economy, jobs will follow — Ricketts-Hagan
1 hour -
World Cup ticket allocations for Ghanaian diaspora not yet received -UN Mission
2 hours -
PURC, ECG and GRIDCo align plans to ensure stable power supply during 2026 FIFA World Cup
2 hours -
Ghana launches National Shea Commodity Platform to commercialise shea production
3 hours -
Bawumia holds talks with British High Commissioner in Accra
3 hours -
AFF study documents 115 edible forest species and indigenous knowledge in biodiversity hotspot
3 hours -
Fortune names Yellow Card among top global crypto innovators
3 hours -
MPs partner with Afarinick to boost Ghana’s cocoa production capacity
3 hours -
Where are the jobs?- Sammy Awuku questions government
3 hours -
Ghana needs effective solutions to rising unemployment, not slogans – Oppong Nkrumah
3 hours -
Oppong Nkrumah calls for overhaul of Ghana’s youth employment strategy
3 hours -
Minnesota attacker pleads guilty in killing of lawmaker and husband, avoids death penalty
3 hours