Audio By Carbonatix
The Dean of Law School of the University of Professional Studies, Accra (UPSA), Professor Ernest Kofi Abotsi, says removing the Chief Justice and other Justices from the General Legal Council (GLC) will end the challenges with legal education.
"I can tell you, the proposed removal of Kwesi Anin-Yeboah from the GLC may not necessarily stop the problem as some people have questioned why judges and others must be on the GLC," he said on JoyNews Newsfile, Saturday.
Professor Abotsi argued that Deans of Law Schools, the Ghana Bar Association and other relevant stakeholders should take a more prominent role in legal education.
In the 2021 entrance exams to the Ghana Law School, only 790 candidates out of the 2,820 who sat the exams were deemed to have satisfied the pass mark required to guarantee their admission to the only legal profession training institute in Ghana – the Ghana School of Law.
The 499 students contend that the pass mark for the entrance exams has always been 50% in both sections of the exams.
But, for this year's exams, and unknown to the candidates before they took the exams, the rule has been changed to students getting at least 50% in both sections.
There is growing opposition to parts of a private members bill to reform legal education set to be introduced by two NDC MPs, Rockson-Nelson Dafeamekpor and Francis-Xavier Sosu.
The two MPs are proposing the removal of the Chief Justice and other Supreme Court Justices from the Council for their inability to improve admissions to the Ghana School of Law.
The legislators believe removing them will form part of a grand agenda to improve access to legal education.
But Professor Abotsi disagrees.
"We haven't done the concerted efforts of reform. Deans of law schools, law teachers, the Ghana Bar Association - these three entities, in particular, have not taken an active role, I mean the front seat in legal education reform. But very often, we have been consulted after the fact," he said.
Meanwhile, a former Deputy Attorney General, Dr Dominic Ayine, has announced plans to introduce another private members bill on legal education reform in Ghana.
He said his bill will be introduced by next week.
Latest Stories
-
Five-year-old boy dies after getting caught in ski travelator
2 hours -
‘This is an abuse of trust’- PUWU-TUC slams gov’t over ECG privatisation plans
2 hours -
Children should be protected from home fires – GNFSÂ
2 hours -
Volta Regional Minister urges unity, respect for Chief Imam’s ruling after Ho central mosque shooting
3 hours -
$214M in gold-for-reserves programme not a loss, Parliament’s economy chair insists it’s a transactional cost
3 hours -
Elegant homes estate unveils ultra-modern sports complex in Katamanso
3 hours -
ECG can be salvaged without private investors -TUC Deputy Secretary-General
3 hours -
Two pilots killed after mid-air helicopter collision in New Jersey
4 hours -
2025 in Review: Fire, power and the weight of return (January – March)
4 hours -
Washington DC NPP chairman signals bid for USA chairmanship
4 hours -
Sheikh Ali Muniru remains Volta regional Imam, says National chief Imam
4 hours -
GoldBod CEO accuses Minority of hypocrisy over Gold-for-Reserves losses
4 hours -
Sammy Gyamfi to address alleged losses under gold for reserves programme on Jan 5
5 hours -
BoG–GoldBod $214m hit is design failure, not market loss – Minority
5 hours -
Festive season sees minor fires, but domestic cases hit 15–20 daily – GNFS
5 hours
