
Audio By Carbonatix
Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin has called on Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) to actively participate in the legislative processes of the country, as part of efforts to improve parliamentary democracy.
He made this statement when the Parliamentary Network Africa (PNAfrica) and the Ghana Parliamentary Monitoring Organizations Network (GPMON) presented the results of the maiden Africa Open Parliament Index to Parliament in Accra on Thursday.
The report showed Ghana leading in a survey conducted in parliamentary openness in the West African sub-region.

The Africa Open Parliament Index (OPI), is a tool that seeks to periodically measure the level of openness of legislative assemblies on the continent. The OPI uses the three criteria of Open Parliament: Transparency, Civic Participation and Public Accountability, to assess Parliaments across Africa.
The Executive Director of PNAfrica Mr. Sammy Obeng, who made the presentation to Parliament, said the purpose of the OPI is to strengthen Parliaments through CSO- Parliament collaborations. “It makes recommendations, which when pursued diligently over time, can show real progress and improvements in the level of openness in the assessed Parliaments”, he said.

Mr. Obeng said the OPI is developed with three specific objectives which are: to strengthen parliamentary institutions towards the advancement of parliamentary openness across national, sub-national and regional parliaments; to identify, compare and exchange knowledge and best practices among parliaments, and among CSOs that work with parliaments; and to foster collaboration between civil society and parliaments towards achieving the principles of open parliament, providing a platform for amplifying open parliament initiatives.
He said, the combined indicators used for the Index are from global best practices on openness, and minimum standards in parliamentary transparency, civic participation and public accountability, to objectively and independently rank the parliaments of the selected countries in a way that identifies the success stories and the Open Parliament gaps.

The Africa OPI is a joint effort of the Africa Parliamentary Monitoring Organisations (APMON) Working Group, which is made up of renowned parliamentary monitoring organizations in Africa namely, Mzalendo Trust (Kenya), Ghana Centre for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana), Parliamentary Monitoring Group (South Africa), Africa Parliamentary Press Network (APPN), the Pan African Parliament Civil Society Forum which is coordinated by the Center for Human Rights of the University of Pretoria, and Parliamentary Network Africa.
Latest Stories
-
Video: Awoshie-Anyaa Highway: Years of fatal crashes caused by faulty traffic lights
3 minutes -
No financial transactions with Ghana Card yet, says NIA
9 minutes -
Former Netherlands Fire Chief engages GNFS Tema Command on capacity building
10 minutes -
Finance Ministry defends Publican AI rollout amid stakeholder concerns
13 minutes -
Police arrest 5 in Asankrangwa robbery; cash and guns retrieved
14 minutes -
Why I joined NPP – Jeneral Ntatia
15 minutes -
Three UDS students remanded over alleged armed robbery
18 minutes -
Kudus Mohammed at risk of missing World Cup 2026 after fresh injury blow
21 minutes -
Minority urges cocoa farmers to resist pressure from galamseyers
21 minutes -
President Mahama applauds astronaut Christina Koch’s Ghana ties in Artemis II mission
23 minutes -
Ex-wife of Richard Nii Armah Quaye moves to Court of Appeal
25 minutes -
Insecurity: US orders non-emergency staff to leave embassy in Nigeria
25 minutes -
ASFC 2026: Ghana U15 girls set up Burkina Faso final after win over Zambia
29 minutes -
The passport question: Why Ghana must let its best abroad come home to serve
41 minutes -
We will be losing twice if these commodities expire at the port – CSOs Coordinator warns
49 minutes