Audio By Carbonatix
A moment of escalated tension erupted at Parliament's Appointments Committee today, Monday, June 16, 2025, during the vetting of Supreme Court judge nominee Justice Senyo Dzamefe as Minority Leader Alexander Afenyo-Markin vociferously called for South Dayi MP Rockson-Nelson Dafeamekpor to be "restrained!" amid heated exchanges.
The outburst occurred as Justice Dzamefe responded to questions, with Mr Afenyo-Markin raising a formal protest to the Chairman of the Committee, Bernard Ahiafor, about the conduct of Mr Dafeamekpor.
"Chairman, I want to register a protest on record," the Minority Leader began, visibly agitated.
He then directed his concerns towards a colleague seated immediately to the Chairman's right, understood to be Mr Dafeamekpor.
"The interjections, though not on record, those interjections are becoming too loud and too many, and we've started well," Mr Afenyo-Markin stated, expressing his displeasure.
READ ALSO: Justice Dzamefe kicks against raising retirement age for judges from 70 to 75
Emphasising the gravity of the ongoing parliamentary duty, Mr Afenyo-Markin urged for decorum.
"We are discharging a constitutional duty. If it were to be on a personal level, I would say, 'My Lord , please, I pass you'," he explained, drawing a distinction between personal interactions and official proceedings.
He voiced concern over how such disruptions could be "misconstrued" by the public.
His plea culminated in a direct appeal to the Chair:
"Please restrain him! Please restrain him; it must not continue," he insisted.
Mr Ahiafor proceeded to inform all committee members to control their emotions.
"All other members are accordingly restrained," he stated.
In response to the Minority Leader's protest and the Chairman's directive, an immediate reaction was heard from Mr Dafeamekpor, asserting, "Were you not interjecting, were you not, did anybody protest?"
The clash briefly halted the vetting proceedings for Justice Dzamefe, underscoring the often-tense political dynamics that play out during the scrutiny of high-profile government appointments.
The committee subsequently moved to restore order to continue with the nomination process.
This is not the first time similar exchanges have occurred during the period of the current parliament.
It could be recalled that chaos erupted in Parliament during the vetting of ministerial nominees by the Appointments Committee on Thursday, January 30, leading to property damage and suspension of proceedings.
Following the incident, the act was vehemently condemned by the public, prompting the Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, to establish a committee to investigate the chaos and identify the Members of Parliament responsible for fuelling the disturbances.
The Speaker also suspended four MPs—Rockson Nelson Dafeamekpor, Frank Annoh-Dompreh, Alhassan Sulemana Tampuli, and Jerry Ahmed Shaib—for their involvement in the chaos.
However, the suspension was later revoked following a plea from the leaders of the minority and majority sides of the chamber.
Latest Stories
-
Green Card decision does not invalidate charges against Ofori-Atta — OSP
3 minutes -
Minority blames NDC for delays in Afari Military Hospital project
9 minutes -
Gov’t processing UTAG book and research allowance payments, no strike expected – Haruna Iddrisu
11 minutes -
‘It’s up to Ghanaian authorities to explore options’ – Ofori-Atta’s lawyer says after US residency
12 minutes -
Banking sector strong but credit risks remain – BoG Governor warns
13 minutes -
BoG warns bank staff against collusion in collateral fraud
21 minutes -
Ghana National Research Fund must drive job creation and national solutions – Mahama
24 minutes -
Maverick Research appoints former NielsenIQ executive Justin Sargent as strategic advisor
26 minutes -
New Zoomlion MD pays courtesy call on Nungua Mantse, seeks traditional blessings for his tenure
27 minutes -
Stonebwoy delivers spectacular performance as WatsUp On Campus makes a stop at UniMAC
28 minutes -
Mahama says Ghana National Research Fund was Atta Mills’ vision
29 minutes -
Asokore Mampong Assembly deploys emergency team to curb flood-related deaths
34 minutes -
Ghana challenges Partey’s visa denial in court
34 minutes -
Why Ghanaian woman refuses to leave South Africa even after becoming homeless
35 minutes -
2026 World Cup: Black Stars arrive in Toronto ahead of opener against Panama
39 minutes