The Northern Regional Coordinator of the Legal Aid
Scheme, Lawyer Awudu Issah Mahmudu, is urging all political parties and their
respective candidates especially parliamentarians, to take interest in learning
the legal system related to electoral disputes.
He said such a step by candidates of the various
contesting political parties would help them to take critical decisions in the
event that electoral disputes arise and there is the need to seek redress in
court.
Lawyer Mahmudu gave this piece of advice when he
facilitated a Legal Resources Centre (LRC) training programme that brought
together some Regional Executives of some political parties in the Northern
Regional capital, Tamale.
The training programme which was organised under a
LRC’s STAR-Ghana sponsored project dubbed: “Consolidating The Electoral
Justice System in Ghana”, sought to enlighten participants on electoral
disputes adjudication processes for political parties in the country.
An official of LRC, Enock Jengre, said under the project, LRC and its partner LADA Institute, are
collaborating with the office of the Chief Justice, the Judicial Training
Institute and the Judicial Service to ensure that adjudication of electoral
disputes are fast tracked.
The
aim of the training, he noted, is for the various political leaders to be
abreast of electoral dispute adjudication mechanisms available in Ghana.
Mr. Jengre said that the
LRC is a non-governmental organization committed to the realization of human
dignity by building human rights capacities.
“This
we do, by facilitating the establishment of human rights cities at home and
abroad, conducting research, advocacy and advisory services including legal aid
for individuals, organizations and communities.
“At
the LRC, we seek to ensure human rights for all. We work towards the promotion
and protection of the rights to Health, Education, Housing, Work, Participatory
Democracy, Personal Liberty and Criminal/Civil justice”, Mr. Jengre explained.
Lawyer
Mahmudu took participants through the various types of courts in Ghana and
their jurisdiction and adjudication processes.
According
to him, any dispute arising from parliamentary elections in the upcoming
December elections, must be sent to the High Court and when one party is
dissatisfied with the outcome, she/he may seek an appeal at the Appeals Court
where any decision taken thereof is considered final.
He
however cautioned politicians to be very careful of tagging state institutions
particularly the security agencies of being the appendages of or belong to one
political party or the other. “When you are in government you work with every
institution. But you accuse every institution of state as soon as you go into
opposition. That is not right and politicians must cease from such acts”, he
adviced.
Going
forward, participating political parties including the CPP, PPP, NPP, NDP, PNC
and NDC recommended among other things, that all elections related cases should
be sent to the court for redress.
They
also recommended that the various courts that are tasked to sit on electoral
disputes that may arise out of the 2016 elections should try as much as
possible to avoid delays.
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