Opinions of Tuesday, 13 September 2022
Columnist: Ernest Kofi Owusu
Attorney General, Godfred Yeboah was right. Indeed, Godfred Dame was absolutely brilliant in describing Mahama’s unsavoury attacks on the judiciary at the Ghana Bar Association (GBA) Annual Conference in Ho as dents on the image of the judiciary in the sight of unsuspecting Ghanaians.
We are all aware of Mahama’s antics in recent times but his latest attack at the opening of the 2nd Annual Lawyers Conference of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) on Sunday, August 28, 2022, is perhaps the most flagrant display of how little respect he has for Ghana’s democracy.
In Mahama's own words, it will take a new Chief Justice to lead the process to repair what he said was the "badly dented image" of Ghana's judiciary for people to win the trust in the system.
For him, the deteriorated image of the judiciary easily sparks laughter from the citizenry when one decides to go to the court for justice.
Holy cow! The same judiciary that Mr Mahama presided over a few years back is totally lacking in integrity today?
Isn't this a clear questioning of the constitutional authority of the judiciary?
As with his actions in regard to the judiciary, this rhetoric attempting to delegitimize the courts as biased and political represents an escalation of a pattern.
As a matter of fact, John Mahama has displayed a troubling pattern of attacking Supreme Court justices and the courts for rulings he disagrees with — a pattern that began during the 2020 presidential election petition, and has continued into his opposition activism.
He has made a series of tweets and public statements attacking judges personally, questioning the authority of the courts, suggesting the court is biased, and suggesting that the judges and court system would be to blame for future electoral violence.
While Mahama’s actions represent a new level of brazenness, they continue a long line of examples of his attempts to turn the judiciary into political puppets, thereby delegitimizing the institution.
This threatens our entire system of government. The courts are bulwarks of our Constitution and laws, and they depend on the public to respect their judgments and on officials to obey and enforce their decisions. Fear of personal attacks, public backlash, or enforcement failures should not color judicial decision-making, and political leaders have a responsibility to respect courts and judicial decisions.
Again, conflicts between the courts and the political branches are common and, to some degree, expected. But this questionable behaviour and efforts to undermine the justice system must not be tolerated by right-thinking Ghanaians. It is all an attempt to wield political influence.
Truth is, Mahama is still bruised over his disastrous outing in 2020. It's been some 21 months after the last elections, and the loser keeps yelling and telling bizarre election fraud story that has already been debunked both in court and in the public space.
Yes, Mr Mahama has been on and on about this for the umpteenth time. So, one would think that his party elders and advisors would step in and instruct him to shush, but no one seems to care.
It's astonishing that after repeated claims of Electoral malfeasance and the worst performances at the Supreme Court, former President Mahama is still not learning lessons from his mistakes. This same Mahama took everyone on a wild goose chase at the Supreme Court and he continue to deflect blame in any direction he can throw it without reflecting on his own failures. His stories are literally so outrageous and demonstrably false that you have to be willfully blind to keep going along.
While the NPP after the 2012 elections, proceeded to court with substantial evidence to back its claims of infractions which included over-voting, voting without verification, etc, the NDC on the otherhand, in 2020 went to court with practically zero evidence to back its claims of electoral fraud. The Supreme Court couldn’t have given a verdict in Mahama’s favour without evidence. His petition was subsequently thrown out, and Mahama simply don't get it. He has since being on rampage at every turn, disparaging the Supreme Court.
It is truly beyond comprehension that the NDC is so poorly led that Mahama is able to get away with such loose talks and disrespect for our institutions of democracy.
Mahama may be oblivious of this but it might interest him to know that, we don't have “Rawlings judges or Kufuor judges, Mills judges or Akufo-Addo judges. What we have is an extraordinary group of dedicated judges doing their level best to do equal right to those appearing before them.
What Mahama utterly fail to grasp is that the judiciary is not a place for a fishing expedition that justice will always be done even if heaven falls.
Let Mahama get it that, if you are always carping incessantly about everything, you lose even more relevance than if you had focussed on the real key issues.
Signed:
Ernest Kofi Owusu Deputy Director of Communications, NPP