
The President of the Ghana National Association of ADR Practitioners (GNAAP), Mr Daniel Owusu-Koranteng, says the conditions under which some mediation sessions are held in courts did not merit the importance the country attached to court-connected Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) activities.
According to Mr Owusu-Koranteng, the existing courts in the country did not have conference rooms for ADR mediation sessions, while court sittings were held in open courts for public hearing.
Speaking at the graduation ceremony held for 62 graduands by the Institute of Paralegal Training and Leadership Studies (IPLS) on Saturday, Mr Koranteng stated that the holding of ADR sessions in open court was not the best as it resulted in confidentiality issues coming out to the public.
He said confidentiality was a fundamental requirement in settling dispute through ADR mediation and urged the government to upgrade the court infrastructure by investing in them to create offices for mediators and provide well-furnished conference rooms for mediation sessions.
Mr Owusu-Koranteng called for a review of the ADR Act 798, 2010, to include GNAAP on the Governing Board of the ADR Centre, emphasising that as of the time of drafting the ADR Act in 2010, there was no ADR professional body in existence.
He then urged the government to improve the remuneration of mediators to attract more professionals to the sector.
That, the President of GNAAP stressed, would help reduce the use of ligation in addressing disputes in the country, which was every expensive.
“The promotion of ADR, is one of the innovative ways of ensuring justice to the citizens regardless of their social and economic status,” he stated.
Mr Owusu-Koranteng advised the graduands to uphold professional ethics of honesty, dignity, impartiality, confidentiality, neutrality, and respect for all, irrespective of a person’s social standing.
BY BENJAMIN ARCTON-TETTEY