Audio By Carbonatix
Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin has expressed his displeasure with the Supreme Court ruling which struck out the law granting license to grow cannabis in Ghana.
The Apex court in July 2022 struck out section 43 which enables the Minister to give license to individuals for the cultivation of cannabis for medicinal and industrial purposes.
According to the Speaker, the Apex court was wrong to carry out the ruling without verifying the right process and procedure a bill goes through before it is enacted.
“I hope the three arms of government will work together and respect each other. In case of doubt, it's important to consult the other arm before giving finality to whatever decision the other arm wants to take.
"I do not think it was proper for the Judiciary without knowing how we conduct our business here, really go into how we conduct the business and make such important decisions without consulting the House. That is improper," he said in Parliament on June 6, 2023.
Meanwhile, the speaker has referred the bill to the Committee of Defense and Interior for consideration.
The committee is expected to come up with the right provision needed to re-enact the law.
Mr. Bagbin added that the matter was of importance to him. He has therefore given the Committee a week to work on the report.
Also, Interior Minister Ambrose Dery described the Supreme Court's ruling as a grievous error.
He said “to therefore say section 43 is unconstitutional because there was no debate in my humble opinion is a grievous error.”
The Nandom MP continued that the bill does not seek to legalise the recreational use of cannabis but to allow the Minister to issue licenses to people who can produce at 0.3% THC.
He added that the legislation was to help government take a modern approach and allow for industrial and medicinal use of cannabis
Meanwhile, the government has introduced the same section which the Supreme Court struck out as an amendment in Parliament.
In August 2022, the Supreme Court said Parliament did not act transparently in the passage of the Narcotics Control Commission Act.
Specific reference was made to portions of the law (Section 43) which permitted the cultivation of cannabis for medicinal and industrial purposes.
Parliament was not transparent in passing Narcotics Control Commission Act – Supreme Court
The court on July 27 declared this provision unconstitutional. The entire decision of the highest court has since been released.
.
Latest Stories
-
Ashanti Region: Military officer arrested over alleged illegal sale of firearms
2 minutes -
Tactical overview of Afcon 2025 – trends to expect
11 minutes -
Vice President commissions Softcare sanitary pads production line, reaffirms gov’t partnership
13 minutes -
Today’s front pages: Wednesday, December 17, 2025
27 minutes -
‘No cracks, no confusion’ – Fifi Kwetey shrugs off NDC rift claims over OSP bill
1 hour -
We returned winners, not losers – Bryan Acheampong rewrites NPP’s electoral history
2 hours -
‘Barely in office, already talking power?’ – Fifi Kwetey slams early succession talk in NDC
2 hours -
‘Performance, not sympathy’ – Bryan Acheampong says NPP must break tradition
2 hours -
After all the branding, we lost 7 Regions – Bryan Acheampong says Bawumia can’t be repackaged
3 hours -
‘The product failed in the market’ – Bryan Acheampong tears into Bawumia’s 2024 numbers
3 hours -
‘I’m way ahead’ – Bryan Acheampong dismisses polls, predicts NPP primary victory
3 hours -
‘I will support whoever wins’ – Bryan Acheampong pledges loyalty to NPP flagbearer
4 hours -
‘We’ll come back stronger’ – Bryan Acheampong vows NPP revival after 2024 defeat
4 hours -
Ivory Coast miners start paying higher royalties after failed resistance, sources say
4 hours -
Nigeria’s House to look into row between regulator and Dangote over fuel imports, pricing
4 hours
