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Politics of Tuesday, 12 September 2023

Source: rainbowradioonline.com

Mahama slams Supreme Court over delay in injunction hearing on limited registration exercise

John Dramani Mahama, Former president John Dramani Mahama, Former president

Former President John Dramani Mahama is upset about the Supreme Court’s delay in scheduling a hearing for an injunction application filed by the NDC and four other political parties against the Electoral Commission regarding limited voter registration.

The presidential candidate of the NDC was not happy that the apex court was yet to set a date for the hearing.

In a Facebook, he said “Contrary to the time-honored practice of the Registrar of the Supreme Court giving dates for applications to be moved, the Registrar has, as of this afternoon, refused to give a date for the application for interlocutory injunction filed against the Electoral Commission (EC) in relation to the Commission’s decision to limit the upcoming voter registration exercise to its district offices only.

“The writ and the injunction application were duly filed at the Registry of the Supreme Court on Thursday, 7th September 2023, at 2:50 p.m.

“The Registrar informed the applicants’ representatives that they were awaiting the date to be given by the Chief Justice, who was outside the jurisdiction at the time. The Chief Justice returned and traveled to Cape Coast for the Bar Conference. As I write, the applicants’ representatives are still waiting at the registry of the Supreme Court”.

“This is unprecedented and does not augur well for public confidence in the justice delivery system. In 2012, when a Ghanaian citizen decided to challenge the creation of the 45 new constituencies, the Supreme Court had a sole judge to decide the interlocutory injunction application in a timely manner.

“The EC starts the lopsided registration exercise tomorrow for which this process is being filed, and yet we all know the famous mantra, “Justice delayed, is justice denied.”

Five political parties filed the suit on September 7, challenging the EC’s decision to restrict the upcoming voter registration exercise to its district offices.

The opposition parties posit that the decision will disenfranchise many eligible voters, especially those who live in remote areas.

The apex court was expected to have scheduled a hearing for the application within a few days of its filing, but it has yet to do so.

The five parties are the NDC, the Convention People’s Party (CPP), the All People’s Congress, the Liberal Party of Ghana and the Great Consolidated Popular Party.