
Hearing of the case challenging the constitutionality of the petition seeking the removal of the Chief Justice, Justice Gertrude Araba Sackey Torkonoo, at the Supreme Court, has been rescheduled to April 9.
The Member of Parliament (MP) for Old Tafo in the Ashanti Region, Vincent Ekow Assafuah,
has instituted an action at the apex asking it to make a pronouncement on the matter.
He contends that President John Dramani Mahama, who received the petition from three Ghanaians and had already forwarded it to the Council of State for advice, was mandated to notify the Chief Justice about the petition for her removal and obtain her response before referring the petition to the Council of State.
The legislator joined the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Dr Dominic Akurutinga Ayine, the government’s principal legal advisor, to the suit as a defendant.
Mr Assafuah is praying the apex court for a declaration that upon a true and proper interpretation of articles 146 (1), (2), (4), (6) and (7), 23, 57 (3) and 296 of the Constitution, the President was mandated to notify the Chief Justice about a petition for the removal of the Chief Justice and obtain his or her comments and responses to the content of such petition before referring the petition to the Council of State or commencing the consultation processes with the Council of State for the removal of the Chief Justice.
The lawmaker wants the Supreme Court to declare that upon a true and proper interpretation of articles 146 (1), (2), (4), (6) and (7), 23 and 296 of the Constitution, failure by the President to notify the Chief Justice and obtain his or her comments and responses to a petition for the removal of the Chief Justice before triggering the consultation process with the Council of State constitutes a violation of article 146 (6) as well as the constitutional protection of the security of tenure of the Chief Justice, who is a Justice of the Superior Court of Judicature, stipulated in article 146 (1) of the Constitution.
Mr Assafuah is again asking the court for a declaration that upon a true and proper interpretation of articles 146 (1), (2), (4),(6) and (7), 23 (57) (3) and 296 of the Constitution, a failure by the President to notify the Chief Justice and obtain his or her comments and responses to a petition for the removal of the Chief Justice before triggering the consultation process with the Council of State amounts to an unjustified interference with the independence of the Judiciary enshrined in article 127(1) and (2) of the Constitution.
He is further seeking a declaration that the failure by the President to notify the Chief Justice and obtain her comments and responses to a petition for the removal of the Chief Justice before triggering the process for her removal, constitutes a violation of the fundamental right to a fair hearing contained in articles 23 and 296, and renders the consultation processes for the removal of the Chief Justice initiated by the President null, void and of no effect.
Since the coming into force of the 1992 Constitution, no petition for the removal of previous Chief Justices were successful.
Justice Sir Ako Korsah was the first Chief Justice sacked by Ghana’s first President, Osagyefo Dr Kwame Nkrumah.
BY MALIK SULLEMANA