Audio By Carbonatix
Former Ranking Member of the Constitutional, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Committee of Parliament has said that the House should have chosen a different approach in dealing with the denial of admission to some candidates who sat the entrance examination to the Ghana School of Law.
The former Tamale Central MP believes it would have been more appropriate for the lawmakers to have invited the Management of the General Legal Council to discuss the matter.
"I think that Parliament should have chosen another route. They should have invited the General Legal Council as part of their oversight responsibilities to explain to them (Parliament) the reasons why 499 students were excluded from the admission list as advertised in their earlier advertisement for prospective students who wanted to enroll at the law school," he said.
Inusah Fuseini was speaking to Ernest Manu on Joy FM's Top Story on Monday.
There have been divided opinions on the legitimacy of Parliament's directive, through a unanimous resolution, to the General Legal Council to admit all 499 LLB candidates who were denied admission to undertake the professional law course.
The Attorney General, Godfred Yeboah Dame, in a letter addressed to the Speaker argued that Parliament cannot use a Resolution to make such directions.
“Whilst recognizing the general legislative powers of Parliament in Ghana, except as has been circumscribed by the Constitution, I am constrained to advise that Parliament is devoid of power through the use of Parliamentary resolutions, to control the process of admission into the Ghana School of Law. The mode of exercising legislative power enshrined in article 106 of the Constitution does not admit of resolutions,” part of the letter read.
Joining discussions on the matter, Inusah Fuseini, described Parliament's approach as "confrontational."
He said such an approach "does not help bring the issues to the fore.
"The issue confronting us in Ghana is not the 499 students," he continued.
"Clearly, we need facilities to be expanded in such a way that will make the opportunity of enrolling to the Ghana School of Law available to a greater number of students," he added.
The former lawmaker suggested also, that Parliament could also have directed "the Executive to make resources available" for the expansion of the Ghana School of Law.
Latest Stories
-
MLS bans Yeboah & Jones for betting offences
3 hours -
He called me traitor 50 times – Mourinho sent off after celebrating goal
3 hours -
Eni Aluko wins Joey Barton libel case over X posts
3 hours -
Ten players from Jamaican club denied entry to US
3 hours -
Some banks move to sell assets of PBC over GHC 300 million debt
3 hours -
Uefa fears impact of Premier League spending rules
3 hours -
EU to sign historic defence pact with Ghana in global security pivot
3 hours -
Liverpool lose to Galatasaray in Slot’s 100th game in charge
3 hours -
Iran begins laying mines in Strait of Hormuz, sources say
4 hours -
Joey Barton refused bail after ‘attack at golf club’
4 hours -
GH¢68.7bn gov’t arrears bombshell: Parliament orders probe over suspected fraud
4 hours -
The public display of students’ academic results in basic schools: A case against a damaging practice
4 hours -
GOIL jumps GH¢0.21, MTN Ghana surges past GH¢6.30 in record-breaking GSE session
4 hours -
NAIMOS disrupts illegal mining activities at Gwira Banso-Eshiem
5 hours -
Ashesi hosts Kensei Kai Foundation’s maiden Inter-University Karate Camp
5 hours
