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Supreme Court sets July 29 for verdict on powers of OSP

Gavel

Gavel

The Supreme Court will on July 29, 2026, deliver judgment in a suit challenging the prosecutorial powers of the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP).

A seven-member panel, chaired by Chief Justice Paul Baffoe-Bonnie, fixed the date after parties concluded arguments in the case brought by private legal practitioner, Noah Adamtey.

Mr Adamtey is challenging the constitutionality of the Office of the Special Prosecutor Act, 2017 (Act 959), arguing that it unlawfully grants the OSP independent prosecutorial authority.

He is seeking a declaration that provisions of the Act conferring original and insulated prosecutorial powers on the OSP are inconsistent with Articles 1 (2), 88 (3) and (4), 93 (2) and 296 of the 1992 Constitution and are, therefore, null and void.

He further contends that Sections 3 (3) and 4 of Act 959, which make the OSP independent of the Attorney-General in initiating, conducting and terminating prosecutions, which violate the Constitution.

The Attorney-General, represented by Deputy Attorney-General, Dr Justice Srem-Sai, maintains that Article 88 (3) vests prosecutorial authority solely in the Attorney-General. He argues that Parliament acted unconstitutionally by requiring the Attorney-General to delegate part of those powers to the OSP.

According to him, the law effectively limits the Attorney-General’s constitutional responsibility for prosecuting criminal offences by carving out cases for the OSP.

In January, the Supreme Court unanimously rejected an application by the OSP to join the case as an interested party.

The court held that the constitutional issues raised could be fully determined between the plaintiff and the Attorney-General without the OSP’s direct participation.

The court also accepted an application by 14 civil society organisations to join the proceedings.

Their lawyer, Kizito Beyuo, argued that the groups played a key role in the establishment of the OSP and possess expertise that could assist the court.

The organisations, including Transparency International Ghana, CDD-Ghana, IMANI Africa and Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition, say their intervention is motivated by a commitment to constitutionalism, accountability, anti-corruption and the preservation of independent public institutions.

BY MALIK SULLEMANA

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