Judge in Opuni's case was caught pants down campaigning for Akufo-Addo
Judge in Opuni's case was caught pants down campaigning for Akufo-Addo-Mogtari.
Court of Appeal judge, Justice Clemence Honyenuga, has been “caught
pants down”, Joyce Bawa Mogtari, an aide to former President John Mahama
has said. This was in reference to the judge’s recent endorsement of the
president’s second term bid when he (the judge), in his capacity as the
Paramount Chief of the Nyagbo Traditional Area known as Torgbui Ashui
Nyagasi V, welcomed Nana Akufo-Addo to Golokwati, Afadzato South, during
the president’s recent tour of the Oti and Volta regions.
Justice Honyenuga, who is sitting on the case between the state, on the
one hand; and the former CEO of the Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD), Dr
Stephen Opuni and businessman Seidu Agongo, told President Nana
Akufo-Addo that his government’s Free Senior High School policy is
unparalleled.
Speaking at a durbar of chiefs and people in honour of Mr Akufo-Addo,
Torgbui Ashui Nyagasi V told the President: “We wish to congratulate you
for the excellent manner you are governing this dear country of ours,
Ghana, and the significant gains made in the economy in your first
term”, adding: “It is true that you have won high admiration, not only
in Africa but also in advanced democracies”.
“Your flagship programmes, like the Free Senior High School, Planting
for Food and Jobs – which has increased food production and has even led
to exports; – One District-One Factory, among others, has (sic)
increased food production and has (sic) improved upon the standard of
living of many Ghanaians”, he said.
“Indeed”, he added: “For special mention is the Free SHS, which has
broken boundaries and has greatly bridged the gap between the rich and
the poor”, observing: “This programme has also broken the record, which
was held by the first President of the Republic of Ghana, Dr Kwame
Nkrumah, who gave free education to our brothers and sisters in the
northern part of Ghana”.
The chief then praised the President thus: “Your Free SHS programme is
unprecedented in the history of Ghana, in a first term, as it covers the
whole country”.
“We, in this district, have equally benefitted and we say ‘ayekoo’ to
Your Excellency and may God and our ancestors shower their blessings on
you, give you longer life and deeper thoughts to move this nation
forward”.
“It is our hope that with your vision and the gains made in your first
term, Ghanaians may consider giving you another four years”.
Speaking on Metro TV’s Good Morning Ghana programme on Monday, 14
February 2020, Mr Mahama’s aide told host Randy Abbey: “ … I would want
to put it in proper perspective that I’m sure that if Justice Honyenuga
watches this clip of himself, reading that statement and if you watch
even the faces of the persons who were sitting around him, it leaves
watchers in no doubt that even they were smarting from it, they were a
touch uncomfortable”.
“Randy, the second thing I would want to put out there is that: we
ought to, no matter what we do, try as much as possible, to think about
some very important judicial principles that in every situation that we
find ourselves in, it is not just about justice being done but it must
be manifestly seen to be done. It is also not the first time that
you’ll see a judge sitting as a traditional ruler, but in this case, we
not only have a judge, but we also have a judge who is currently sitting
on cases involving some very senior political persons, specifically,
politicians from the erstwhile NDC administration, who are currently
standing trial for all sorts of charges, and we have this particular
judge sitting on this matter. “Randy, even to the uninitiated, to the unaided eyes, when you watch and
listen to a judge of this stature, speak in such partisan terms and in
such political lines, and then you are told that the same judge is also
sitting on this high-profile political trials, this is a case of a judge
being caught flagrante delicto – basically pants down; acting in a
manner unbecoming [of a judge].
“When you are caught there – ajar, you leave no logical or reasonable conclusion in the mind of anybody watching.
“It is not even an objective welcome address, it is not a considered
statement, it is not even a case for you to say that: ‘Maybe, whoever
wrote the speech did not realise that the person who was going to come
and read it, was not only a judge sitting on such a high-profile
political case; I don’t think anybody was in any cahoots about what was
going on”, the former Deputy Minister of Transport argued.
She continued: “There is a good reason why whenever applications are
put in for people to serve as judges – and I’m sure you listened to the
new judge who is in charge of the judiciary complaint unit who spoke at
length about the fact that judges must be manifestly seen to be persons
who have a high level of integrity, who have an equally modest approach
to their pronouncements, especially their public utterances.
“There is also a certain expectation that the ethics of the judicial
oath, will, in many ways, place on you a certain burden that disallows a
judge from making comments, that will appear, first and foremost, not
only sub judice – outside your remit, outside your mandate – but that
seek or purport to put you or cast you in a certain light.
“We do know that judges certainly have a right to vote, and they do
vote; they would certainly have their inner proclivities about whom and
how or which political party they wish or intend to cast their vote for,
but Randy, we have, in recent times, realised that there is a certain
constitutional prohibition of chiefs, in particular, making such
political statements or taking such political views, judging by the
number of times that these matters have come up. The House of Chiefs
itself, has, in recent times, come up for serious criticism. If you
recall, there was a matter involving Togbe Afede issuing a certain
statement, the pros and cons of that conversation regarding the position
taken in respect of the referendum …
“I have heard about chiefs requesting, for example, for development
projects, for calling on leaders to ensure peace and stability,
especially it being an election year, I have also heard about chiefs
even admonishing for some perceived wrongs or allegations of wrongdoing
within society. I know chiefs who have campaigned actively against
deforestation, and, of course, against galamsey and its ramifications on
the environment; these are social causes that anybody within any
societal remit is allowed to speak to, but when you hear a judge of the
Superior Court advocate a second term for a sitting President, this was
not done privately, it was not done in a tête-à-tête conversation with
the said individual, the ramifications are dire”, Mogtari insisted.
She added: “And I’m sure if you listen to the President when he
delivered the State of the Nation Address, he made reference to about 40
persons who are currently standing trial for all manner of charges, per
se, then you have the same President visiting a community and having a
judge, who happens to be sitting currently on one of these very
politically-influenced cases [make those comments]”.
Mrs Mogtari said had the same thing happened under the Mahama administration, the narrative would have been different.
“I shudder to think of what would have happened if, under the NDC
administration led by President Mahama, that a judge sitting on any
matter involving any member of the then-opposition had come out so
openly to make such very fluid remarks, committing his entire community;
in fact, he [the judge] campaigned even more than the President on that
particular occasion.
“… So, I ask: what will make a judge make those pronouncements? And you
know, this is a very experienced judge, and I wonder what his own
colleagues may have said to him in the aftermath; I even wonder what the
Judicial Service [may have said to him].
“I believe the Judicial Service must openly rebuke such conduct …
Immediately after that story broke, I even actually called on our own
party’s committee that we must petition the Chief Justice, directly;
first for some sanctions, second for renewed guidelines – maybe they
need to spell them out once more and spell them out clearly, and
thirdly; this particular judge should not be allowed to go on in this
matter; that one I insist on it; it is totally unfair to the persons
being prosecuted, it is a biased perspective, it actually shows a judge
caught in making a biased statement of a political kind who appeared
very passionately partisan in his delivery and, so, … nobody would
expect that such a judge would fairly dispense justice …”, she added.
She also wondered why civil society organisations are not speaking on
the matter. “… I am also surprised about the quietude, first; of moral
society, of the Ghana Bar Association, National Media Commission, the
Ghana Institute of Journalism, National Media Foundation, of our CSOs,
Christian Council; suddenly the moral voices have gone mute.
“I am also surprised about the quiet voices led by very distinguished
individuals like OccupyGhana, individuals, who, hitherto, had
interesting words of caution and advice for many individuals on even
welcome addresses that were given initially, in years past, by some
individuals were heavily criticised and subjected to rigorous debate
about whether or not they had crossed the line and ethics of their work …
“There is an even greater responsibility on a judge or any individual
who is serving currently as a judge; we’re not talking about a retired
judge, about a former judge, no. You know what happened to Justice
Kpegah when he made comments that people found to be against the
pronouncements of a judge. We know, recently, what has happened to
Justice Date-Baah, who was nominated as a distinct individual to serve
on the Telecoms Tribunal … So, when you hear a judge sitting on such a
matter, come out so openly, Randy, in broad daylight, in the full glare
of the general public, and speak to such matters, I think first and
foremost, Dr Opuni and the others I know are currently before his court,
should immediately, petition the Chief Justice for him to recuse
himself. Because I believe that these comments are very disparaging,
they generate some disrepute, they do not augur well for the outcome of
the case.
No comments:
Post a Comment