
Old Tafo Member of Parliament Vincent Ekow Assafuah has said the dismissal of his application by the Supreme Court is not the end of the road.
He argues that the 3-2 decision of the Supreme Court shows that the highest court of the land even found merit in the arguments they put up in court.
Asked whether this is the end of the road, he said, “Well, it is not the end of the road. Let us get the reasoning first. Of course, the 3-2 decision suggests that the Supreme Court itself sees some reason in the arguments that we made in court. It tells you that our arguments or the reasoning that we presented in court were quite potent. So let us get the reasoning, and when we get the reasoning, we will be able to decide what we intend to do after assessing the reasoning,” he told journalists on Tuesday, May 6.
The Supreme Court, in a majority decision of 3-2, with Justices Mensah Bonsu and Ernest Gaewu dissenting, refused the application by Vincent Assafuah, preventing further action from being taken and ordering a halt to the warrant suspending the Chief Justice
Prior to the dismissal, the Supreme Court had, by a unanimous decision, dismissed the objection raised by Godfred Dame against Acting Chief Justice Paul Baffoe Bonnie in the case against a petition to remove the Chief Justice Getrturde Torkornoo.
According to the apex court, the issue raised by Dame did not disqualify Justice Baffoe-Bonnie from presiding over the proceedings, and that due judicial process would be upheld throughout the case.
Godfred Dame had raised an objection against the Acting Chief Justice, Justice Paul Baffoe Bonnie, in the case against the petition seeking to remove the Chief Justice Gertrude Torkornoo.
During proceedings in court on Tuesday May 6, Godfred Dame argued Justice Baffoe-Bonnie cannot be the president of the panel because he stands to be directly affected by the outcome of the proceedings, an argument that was rejected by Deputy Attorney-General Justice Srem Sai.
The court is currently deliberating to decide on the objection.
At last sitting, the panel of four sitting instead of five, chaired by Justice Osei Bonsu, noted that the adjournment had been occasioned due to “unavoidable reason”.
Justice Samuel Asiedu, the fifth member of the panel, was absent when the case was called on Wednesday, April 16.
Former Attorney General Godfred Yeboah Dame, had earlier averred that the president ought to hold on with the consultation processes with the Council of State.
He noted that the law prohibits the continuation of court processes when there’s an injunction application.
President John Dramani Mahama forwarded three petitions calling for the removal of Chief Justice Gertrude Torkornoo to the Council of State for advice, in accordance with Article 146 of the 1992 Constitution.
A statement from the Presidency’s Communications Directorate on Tuesday, March 25, 2025, confirmed that the petitions had been submitted by various individuals, urging the President to take action against the Chief Justice.
Following constitutional procedures, President Mahama has referred the matter to the Council of State to begin the consultation process required before any further action can be taken.
The Chief Justice subsequently responded to the petition.
“He needs to understand that this is the performance of a constitutional duty and the law is very clear that you cannot enjoin the performance of a constitutional or public obligation,” the A-G noted.
The post Suspension of CJ: Supreme Court’s 3-2 dismissal of our case is not end of the road – Assafuah first appeared on 3News.
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