The Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision yesterday, dismissed two suits challenging the constitutionality of the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill.
The court, presided over by Justice Avril Lovelace Johnson, said it was of the considered view that the plaintiffs, Richard Dela Sky, a private legal practitioner, and Dr Amanda Odoi, a researcher, failed to properly invoke the original jurisdiction of the court.
The decision of the court gives the green light to President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to assent to the bill which was passed on February 28, 2024.
After the ruling, counsel for Dr Odoi, Dr Ernest Arkoh, told journalists that he respects the decision of the court, but disagrees with it.
On February 28, Parliament passed the Human and Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, commonly referred to as the anti-LGBTQ+ Bill into law.
But, even before the Speaker transmitted the bill to the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, for his assent to the bill, a broadcast journalist, and private legal practitioner, Mr Sky, filed a motion at the SC to injunct him from undertaking his constitutional duty.
On Wednesday, July 17, a five-member SC panel chaired by the Chief Justice, Justice Gertrude Araba Sackey Torkono, in deferring its ruling, indicated that it will give the decision on the injunction application and the substantive application together in an expedited trial.
The Supreme Court is hearing two lawsuits, challenging the constitutionality of the antiLGBTQ+ bill.
Mr Sky and Dr Amanda Odoi, a researcher, had filed various suits challenging the passage of the anti-LGBTQ+ bill and its possible assent by the President.
In a writ invoking the jurisdiction of the apex court to interpret and enforce the Constitution, Mr Sky is seeking an order from the court to restrain the Speaker and Clerk of Parliament from presenting the anti-LGBTQ+bill to the President for his assent.
He is further seeking an injunction against any attempt to enforce the Bill, especially the aspect that criminalises same sex relationship.
The writ filed at the SC on March 5, 2024, contends that the anti-LGBTQ+bill contravenes many provisions in the Constitution such as Article 12(1), which enjoins all arms of government to respect and uphold the fundamental human rights of all persons, Article 15(1) which protects the dignity of all persons and Article 18(2) which protects the privacy of people.
Other provisions, he argues, are Article 17(1) which provides for equality before the law, and Article 21(a) and (b) which protect freedom of speech and thought.
The plaintiff is, therefore, seeking a declaration from the Supreme Court that the Bill sins against all the above stated provisions, as well as Articles 106 and 108, which dictate the mode by which Parliament can pass a Bill.
Again, Mr Sky is seeking a declaration from the court that at the time the Bill was passed, Parliament lacked the requisite quorum as stipulated by Articles 102 and 104 of the Constitution.
Dr Odoi, on the other hand, is also at the Supreme Court with a case that the Speaker of Parliament and Parliament in general had violated the Constitution.
It is her case that the Speaker of Parliament breached Article 108 of the 1992 Constitution by not giving an opinion on whether the Bill when implemented could lead to financial consequences on the country through a charge on the consolidated fund.
BY MALIK SULLEMANA