Audio By Carbonatix
The Supreme Court has set October, 23 2018 to determine when they will judge on the legality of President John Mahama's decision to set free three National Democratic Congress loyalists jailed for criminal contempt in July 2016.
The judgment is expected to bring to a close a case that has travelled two years after NPP lawyer Nana Asante Bediatuo, Elikplim L. Agbemava and Alfred Tuah-Yeboah filed their cases in September 2016.
The three challenged then President Mahama's pardon of Salifu Maase, host of a morning political talk show of Montie FM, Alistair Nelson and Godwin Ako Gunn, all panellists.
The three who were peeved over a judgment ordering the Electoral Commission to delete some invalid names from the voters' registery went on air threatening to "open fire" on some Supreme Court judges.
Angered by the president's intervention, the three private citizens maintain the pardon of the loyalists barely a month into their four-month conviction is "an unjustified interference with the independence of the Judiciary and, therefore, affront to the Constitution of Ghana."
The President had pardoned the three known as 'Montie 3' on 22 August 2016 based on powers conferred on him under Article 72 (1) of the 1992 Constitution, a statement said.
The pardon which came about three months before a crucial general election in December was interpreted as a move to satisfy supporters of the governing NDC and fire them up for the campaign trail.
The opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) branded it as a presidential slap on the face of the judges who had been threatened by the contemnors on the day that the judiciary marked the anniversary of murdered judges in June 1982 under a military junta.
Criticism against the NDC government over the pardon ebbed as the political climate changed with the defeat of President John Mahama and the NDC in the December 7 polls.
The NPP formed a new government in January 2017 and one of the three plaintiffs Nana Asante Bediatuo was appointed the President's Executive Secretary.
The lawyers for the plaintiffs took an entire year to file their memorandum of issues after the court asked that the cases be consolidated. The case was called again in March 2018 with the judges chiding the three lawyers for the plaintiffs over the delays.
At the June 6, 2018 hearing Justice Sophia Adinyira adjourned the case explaining some of the seven-member panel were absent.
The case is expected to be finally decided on October 23. Nana Asante Bediatuo has said that ”if the courts find our case favourable, they should go back to prison and continue where they left off”.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana must stop absorbing losses from gold purchase programme – Senyo Amekplenu
2 minutes -
Diversionary tactics: Hopeson Adorye slams minority’s boycott of CJ’s parliamentary visit
28 minutes -
Senegal FA backs Pape Thiaw after AFCON Final walkout against Morocco
29 minutes -
Cedi records mixed performance but signals rebound; one dollar equals GH¢12.00 at forex bureaus
35 minutes -
NPP flagbearer race: Youth support could propel Kennedy Agyapong to victory – Sanity Africa
38 minutes -
2026 World Cup: Ebenezer Sefah urges Otto Addo to rely on home-based scouts
40 minutes -
Bond market: Turnover up 14% to GH¢5.29bn
43 minutes -
85 pass out as maiden enforcement officers to fight against smuggling of tree crops
52 minutes -
NPP flagbearer race: Kennedy Agyapong leads among self-employed, students and unemployed – Sanity Africa
54 minutes -
Ignore them if they later seek help — Adorye tells Chief Justice after Minority boycott
1 hour -
Roc Nation Sports International announces inaugural youth football tournament in Ghana
1 hour -
Walewale MP condemns military assault on journalist, civilians; calls for probe
1 hour -
Male fertility declines with age – Health expert
1 hour -
Old Vandals stand with one of their own as First Sky Group marks 23 years of excellence
1 hour -
IShowSpeed gets grand welcome at Black Star Square by Supercar Spectacle
1 hour
