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Suspension of Chief Justice: The President is doing what he is required to do – Governance expert

By Christabel Success Treve
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Suspension of Chief Justice: The President is doing what he is required to do – Governance expert

Dr Baffour Agyemang Duah

Governance expert, Professor Baffour Agyeman-Duah, says President John Mahama has not erred in initiating the process to remove the Chief Justice.

Speaking on the Keypoints, the former UN advisor said Mahama’s actions are consistent with constitutional requirements.

“From my limited perspective, I think the president is doing what he’s required to do. I don’t find any fault with what he’s done,” he stated on May 3.

While Prof. Agyeman-Duah acknowledged that he is not a lawyer and cannot delve into the legal intricacies, he insisted the constitutional process is being rightly followed.

His comments come in the wake of public debate following Mahama’s suspension of the Chief Justice, Gertrude Torkornoo.

Despite criticism from some quarters, he believes this moment is a test of Ghana’s democratic resilience.

“It’s great that we are proving something to ourselves as Democrats. This is testing the resilience of the system,” he said.

He called for a structural reform of how Ghana appoints and removes Chief Justices, as part of the ongoing constitutional review process.

According to him, the current arrangement where the President plays a key role creates the perception of executive interference in the judiciary, undermining public confidence in the independence of state institutions.

“Once the executive appears to be part of the process, it creates all these kinds of concerns,” he said.

“We must look at how we create a new structure of relationship that will insulate each of the three arms of government from each other,” he proposed.

The governance expert cited Kenya as a model where judicial independence is protected through an independent Judicial Council responsible for appointing the Chief Justice, subject to parliamentary approval.

“If we can borrow from Kenya’s example, where it’s advertised, people apply, and the best is selected by an independent body, I think that’s a better way,” he suggested.

Prof. Agyeman-Duah says the constitutional review spearheaded by Professor H. Kwesi Prempeh offers Ghana a historic opportunity to fix this long-standing imbalance.

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Christabel Success Treve is a writer with 3news.com. Follow him on X, @christabel-success-treve and LinkedIn: Christabel Success Treve

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