Former Director of the Ghana School of Law, Kwaku Ansa-Asare, has shared his thoughts on Chief Justice Gertrude Torkonoo’s request for copies of the petitions seeking her removal from office.
Speaking in an interview on Adom FM’s Dwaso Nsem on Thursday, March 28, Mr. Ansa-Asare said if he was in the Chief Justice’s position, he wouldn’t have bothered to ask for the petitions.
“If I were the Chief Justice, I wouldn’t have even asked for the copies. But the fact that she has requested them shows that she knows the law and understands that she is entitled to them,” he said.
He explained that the law requires a Chief Justice to be informed of any petition filed against them.
“The law is clear—if a petition is sent against the Chief Justice, she must know what it says. That’s why she wrote to the President requesting her copies.”
However, he argued that the Chief Justice did not necessarily need to make a formal request.
“Even if she hadn’t written to the President, she should just continue her work. The Council of State will ask if she has been given copies, and if not, they will direct the President to provide them,” he added.
According to Mr. Ansa-Asare, proceeding with the petition without giving the Chief Justice an opportunity to respond would be improper.
“A petition without the response of the person it is against is incomplete. How do you make a decision without hearing from the other side?” he questioned.
His comments come after Chief Justice Gertrude Torkonoo formally requested copies of the three petitions submitted to President John Mahama seeking her removal.
In a letter to the President on Thursday, March 27, she stated, “I am by this letter humbly and respectfully asking His Excellency the President and eminent members of the Council of State to forward the petitions against me and allow me at least seven days after receipt to provide my response, which can then form part of the material for the consultations anticipated under Article 146(6), before the possible setting up of a Committee of Inquiry under Article 146(7).”
The matter has sparked debate over due process in handling petitions against a sitting Chief Justice.
ALSO READ:
- Chief Justice requests copies of petitions seeking her removal from Mahama
- NPP MP files suit against AG over Chief Justice removal process
- This can break the nation – Manhyia South MP cautions Council…