Audio By Carbonatix
The Minority in Parliament has filed a motion urging the Speaker of Parliament, Rt. Hon. Alban Bagbin, to suspend the vetting of the newly nominated Chief Justice, Justice Paul Baffoe-Bonnie, until all legal issues surrounding the removal of former Chief Justice Gertrude Torkonoo are fully resolved in court.
According to the Minority, proceeding with the vetting process while the matter is still before the courts would amount to a breach of due process and could prejudice the outcome of the ongoing legal proceedings.
They argue that allowing the appointment process to continue may undermine public confidence in the judiciary and Parliament’s constitutional oversight role.
JoyNews Legal Affairs Correspondent, Kwaku Asante reported that the Minority Caucus say the motion, formally presented to the Speaker on Tuesday, calls for restraint and respect for the rule of law, insisting that the current situation raises constitutional and procedural concerns about the removal of a sitting Chief Justice.
Watch Kwaku Asante's report on JoyFM's Super Morning Show;
On Monday, October 27, the Minority Leader, Alexander Afenyo-Markin said that the minority will not boycott the vetting despite their strong disagreement with the process that led to the suspension of the immediate past Chief Justice, Gertrude Torkonoo.
He said this on PM Express, watch the video below;
Parliament’s Appointments Committee is expected to vet Justice Paul Baffoe-Bonnie on Monday, 10 November, following his nomination by the President to head the country’s judiciary after Chief Justice Gertrude Torkonoo was suspended on grounds of misconduct.
The legal battle
The suspended Chief Justice has since initiated several legal actions challenging her removal and is seeking justice through the courts, including Human Right Court in Accra and ECOWAS Court of Justice.
In July this year, the Human Rights Division of the High Court in Accra has dismissed a judicial review application filed by the suspended Chief Justice.
The court, presided over by Justice Kwame Amoako, was of the view that the application constitutes an abuse of court process and that it lacks jurisdiction to consider it.
Latest Stories
-
Beyond the goals! Resetting financial accountability and public trust in Ghana’s World Cup journey
41 minutes -
Ensign Global University and Engage Now Africa leads call for action on Albinism awareness and inclusion
55 minutes -
Sales boy captured on CCTV cameras stealing, jailed 36 months
2 hours -
‘Life moves fast; make every day count’ — Prof Ofori-Dankwa advises youth
2 hours -
Veteran Nollywood actor, Kola Oyewo dies
3 hours -
FIFA defends attendance figure amidst empty seats
3 hours -
US-based Professor Joseph Ofori-Dankwa credits Ghana’s education system for his global success
4 hours -
Gov’t unveils transition measures for new legal education system
5 hours -
Keta government hospital at 100: Preserving a century of service, protecting a legacy for future generations
5 hours -
Okyenhene lauds Garden City University leadership, urges focus on education and human capital
5 hours -
Morning Glory Montessori launches 30th anniversary celebration with year-long programme
5 hours -
USA thrash Paraguay 4-1 in Group D opener
5 hours -
GES summons teacher unions for emergency talks over controversial staff data collection exercise
5 hours -
Award schemes and matters arising : The great Ghanaian illusion we have condoned for generations
5 hours -
University of Ghana Vice-Chancellor urges inclusion of African languages in AI development
5 hours