Audio By Carbonatix
Supreme Court nominee, Justice Hafisata Amaleboba, has firmly asserted that Ghana’s family law, particularly about the distribution of marital property, is not based on gender but on principles of equity, as enshrined in the 1992 Constitution.
Appearing before Parliament’s Appointments Committee for vetting on Wednesday, Justice Amaleboba addressed concerns and public perceptions surrounding the perceived bias in the division of marital assets, particularly claims that the law tends to favour women.
“When it comes to family law, the principles are applicable equally to men as it does to women,” she stated.
“Because when it comes to distribution of marital property, it is not based on gender, even though it may seem so. It may seem so, but the law is not based on gender,” she continued.
Citing Article 22 of the Constitution, Justice Amaleboba explained that the law provides for the equitable distribution of property acquired during marriage, without any reference to the sex of the parties involved.
“Article 22 says that assets acquired during marriage are to be distributed equitably. Irrespective of the gender, that is what the provision is. It is not in any way discriminatory of any gender,” she added.
She gave an example of a divorce case she handled where the man had no property but the woman did, and she ended up allocating some of the woman's property to the man.
Justice Amaleboba is the second woman among the seven judges nominated by President John Mahama to be considered for the Supreme Court.
She was among the 15 justices appointed to the Court of Appeal in 2022 by former President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
Before her tenure on the Court of Appeal, Justice Amaleboba served as a High Court judge, where she was involved in several high-profile cases, including serving on the three-member panel presiding over the famous alleged coup plot involving the late Dr Mac-Palm.
Her areas of expertise include family law, land law, and alternative dispute resolution.
Latest Stories
-
Gunmen allegedly kidnap teenager at Kabulya near Bimbilla, demand ransom
31 seconds -
Fernandes breaks assist record as Brighton land Euro spot despite loss
3 minutes -
Sunderland reach Europa League at Chelsea’s expense
7 minutes -
Spurs beat Everton to secure Premier League survival
10 minutes -
Xenophobia: Ghana to receive first batch of evacuees from South Africa on May 27
35 minutes -
GPL 2025/26: Swedru All Blacks stun Kotoko in dramatic final-day comeback
41 minutes -
Slump continues as cedi becomes worst-performing currency in sub-Saharan Africa in 2026
1 hour -
Petroleum Commission hails 7 Eleven’s indigenous bolt and nut plant as sign of local content growth
1 hour -
Keta MP offers relief to Afiadenyigba SHS after fire outbreak
2 hours -
UMaT graduates 95 students, commits to training 1,000 coders
2 hours -
Modified Taxation Scheme: Ghana’s surest way to inclusive tax administration
2 hours -
Asunafo North Cocoa Farmers Union and partners rescue rural schools from infrastructure crisis
2 hours -
Africa must become a destination for investment, not aid — Deputy Finance Minister
2 hours -
Regulation by invoicing: Systemic flaws in NITA’s licensing push and threat to Ghana’s digital trust
2 hours -
‘I’m sick and tired of this country’ – Ghanaian in South Africa pours out frustrations at meeting with Foreign Affairs Minister
3 hours