Eight
magistrates and five circuit court judges were yesterday sworn into
office by the Chief Justice, Mrs Justice Georgina Theodora Wood.
The
event, which took place at the premises of the Supreme Court in Accra,
was the first swearing-in ceremony of newly appointed judges and
magistrates by the Judicial
Service after ace investigator, Anas
Aremeyaw Anas and his Tiger Eye PI team’s expose on alleged corrupt
practices in the judiciary.
The appointment of the newly inducted
judges can be described as historic, because for the first time in the
country’s judicial practice, the Judicial Council published their names
in the various newspapers in the country as part of the appointment
process.
This was to engage the general public in the process by
sending their comments to the council as to whether the appointees had
engaged in any questionable acts likely to compromise their work or dint
the image of the judiciary.
Corrupt
An Appeal Court judge
and the President of the Association of Magistrates and Judges (AMJG),
Justice Dennis Dominic Adjei, said it was unfortunate that some people
now perceive judges and the entire judicial system as corrupt in the
wake of Anas’ expose.
He said at the time of the expose, there
were 400 judges and magistrates in the country, but only 34 were
indicted representing 8.5 per cent of the total number.
Out of
those indicted, he said one lower court judge was exonerated while 21
were dismissed; two of the High court judges had retired while the cases
of nine were pending in the law courts.
“I shall not condone
corruption but I am of the opinion that the indictment of the 8.5 per
cent by the expose was over exaggerated to include all judges and
magistrates. The percentage of the judges who were indicted was a minute
fraction of the Judiciary and it is unfair to tag the entire judiciary
as corrupt,” he indicated.
According to Justice Adjei, any
attempt to attack the judiciary without any substantial evidence could
adversely affect the country’s economy as “it would deter investors from
investing in the country and those who may invest may seek adjudication
outside Ghana for the breaches of contract to be determined.”
Integrity
The
Solicitor General, Mrs Helen A.A. Ziwu, advised the judges to make
integrity their hallmark in the discharge of their duties, adding that
“integrity leads a good judge to be firm but not draconian, kind but not
soft and above all incorruptible”
The President of the Ghana Bar
Association (GBA), Mr Ben Nutsupkui, emphasised the need for judges to
maintain effective communication with lawyers to enhance the justice
delivery process.
“It is our hope that in case you may not, for
any reason, be able to attend court, we get notified early enough so as
not to sit in court and waste valuable time,” he said. |
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