Audio By Carbonatix
Convenor of the One Ghana Movement, Senyo Hosi, says Ghana’s current justice system makes it difficult to achieve timely and effective investigations and trials, particularly in corruption-related cases.
Speaking on JoyNews’ Newsfile on Saturday, October 11, during discussions on the topic “ORAL: Legal Delay or Deal-Cutting Sabotage?”, Mr Hosi said that while some progress was being made, major reforms were urgently needed to fix long-standing weaknesses in the system.
“The key things we need now are the reforms that can deliver the success we need, because what is obvious is that the current structure does not deliver it,” he said.
He explained that delays in investigations and the slow pace of trials have always been major obstacles to justice delivery, saying that without structural changes, corruption cases will continue to drag on without meaningful conclusions.
“Investigations and the trial process these are the two things. They’ve always been problems. And of course, political will has been a big problem,” Mr Hosi stated.
However, he acknowledged that there were signs of improvement within the judiciary and expressed cautious optimism that gradual reforms were taking place.
“But for where I sit today, as somebody passionate about this matter, what I see is work being done. I say this because I see structural reforms resetting. There is some resetting happening gradually within the judiciary,” he said.
Mr Hosi stressed that reforms within the judicial process itself were essential to ensure that completed investigations are quickly followed by prosecutions and fair judgments.
“Those steps are being taken. We need reforms in the judicial process itself. When the investigations are done, we can have expedited trials and bring resolutions to these things,” he added.
He also challenged the current government and Parliament to demonstrate genuine commitment to reform, noting that their current majority provides the political space to enact real change.
“Right now, in Parliament, they have an absolute majority, which is why if we don’t get the reforms now, then we are certain that John Mahama never meant us well,” Mr Hosi said.
Latest Stories
-
Stonebwoy reveals how insurance money paid his school fees and inspired his giving back journey
2 minutes -
How Xoom is keeping Ghanaian families connected
24 minutes -
US pauses offshore wind projects over security concerns
29 minutes -
Gunmen abduct 28 Muslim travellers in central Nigeria
30 minutes -
Treasury market to record another oversubscription; government to borrow GH¢3.31bn this week
31 minutes -
Christmas offers moment for reflection, stewardship and hope — AME Zion Presiding Bishop
39 minutes -
Old Tafo begins 2-kilometre road project, bringing relief to traders and residents
44 minutes -
Bubune Africa donates care packs to patients at Tema General Hospital
45 minutes -
Ghana’s building construction inflation drops to 5.9% in November 2025
47 minutes -
KATH launches 70th anniversary with call to reposition for the future
49 minutes -
Cedi to rebound against dollar over next 2 weeks; one dollar equals GH¢12.40 at forex bureaus
1 hour -
Report on Ghana’s new national airline to be presented to President Mahama today
1 hour -
Martin Kpebu rejects CRC proposal to extend presidential term
1 hour -
Christmas Special Operations: 56 suspected criminals arrested across Western North Region
2 hours -
Christmas Message: President Mahama reaffirms commitment to #ResettingGhana agenda
2 hours
