The Minority in Parliament has announced their decision not to work with the Commission established to probe the violence that characterised the Ayawaso West-Wuogon by election.
In a statement, the Minority said it will not be part of any attempt to create immunity protection for criminals.
“We wish to make clear that regardless of the Commission of Inquiry
so established by the President, it is our reasonable expectation that
criminal investigations and prosecutions will be carried out without
prejudice to the work of the Commission.
“The Minority would not be part of any scheme to cover up or create immunity for the perpetrators,’ the Minority said.
The statement also noted they have not yet heard from the police since meeting them last week over the attacks.
Below are details of the statement
STATEMENT BY THE MINORITY IN PARLIAMENT ON JUSTICE FOR THE VICTIMS OF
THE STATE-SPONSORED TERROR DURING THE AYAWASO WEST WUOGON BY-ELECTION
Today
marks exactly one week since the Minority boycotted Parliamentary
proceedings and marched to the Ghana Police Headquarters to demand
justice following the State-sponsored terror that characterised the
January 31, 2019 by-election in the Ayawaso West Wuogon Constituency.
As
is now well known; innocent, unarmed citizens including our colleague
Member of Parliament for Ningo-Prampram – Sam Nartey George were
brutally attacked and others shot at leaving many of them hospitalised
with their lives altered permanently.
In
the aftermath of the bloody attacks, which must also be seen as an
assault on our democratic credentials, the Minister of State at the
Presidency responsible for National Security, Bryan Acheampong conceded
that his outfit was responsible for recruiting those bloodthirsty party
bandits and providing them with the logistics, weapons and masks which
they used to terrorize the very tax payer President Akufo-Addo swore to
protect.
In our
interaction with the police high command last week, we made it clear
that the good people of this country whom we represent in Parliament
expect nothing short of swift and comprehensive justice in this matter.
Sadly,
since that meeting with the Ghana Police Service, not only has there
been no further communication with us, more worryingly, there has not
been a single arrest of the perpetrators despite the existence of
abundant information including numerous pictures and videos which are
exceedingly useful to investigators in every jurisdiction.
Besides,
their leader and mastermind, Mr. Bryan Acheampong has stated publicly
that he knows the hoodlums and therefore it is safe to assume that he
can easily produce them to face the law, even as we expect Bryan
Acheampong himself to have been dismissed by now and equally made to
answer for his crimes.
We
wish to make clear that regardless of the Commission of Inquiry so
established by the President, it is our reasonable expectation that
criminal investigations and prosecutions will be carried out without
prejudice to the work of the Commission.
The Minority would not be part of any scheme to cover up or create immunity for the perpetrators.
The position we take on this matter is further strengthened by the Ghana @ 50 case where it was held inter alia that:
“It
is however a matter of judicial notice that persons against whom
adverse findings were made by the Commission of Inquiry into the Yendi
events and the Commission of Inquiry into the Accra Sport Stadium
Disaster were prosecuted in the High Court, notwithstanding the clear
provisions of article 280 of the constitution, which clearly represent
the aspirations of the great men and women who engineered our 1969, 1979
and the 1992 constitutions; the aspiration being that findings of
commissions of inquiry should never develop into criminal trials…
Flowing from the aspirations of the framers of our constitution that the
findings of a commission of inquiry are not to develop into a criminal
trial, I find that the Ghana @ 50 Commission of Inquiry itself
respectfully erred when it recommended that Government may prosecute the
applicants herein.”
It was additionally stressed that:
“From
the historical development of Commissions of Inquiry under our
constitutional framework, it should now be clear that reports of such
commissions containing adverse findings are judgments of the High Court
as defined by the constitution, and the persons affected by the said
judgment have the right of appeal to the Court of Appeal. If this was
the thinking of the framers of our constitution, as demonstrated by the
Constitutional Proposals cited in this ruling, can it then be right for
the Attorney- General to prosecute the affected persons against whom the
Republic has already secured a judgment; from which judgment they have
the automatic right of appeal? No, I think the provisions in Chapter
Twenty Three of the 1992 Constitution are clear enough on the intentions
and aspirations of the framers as expressed in paragraph 301 of the
1978 Constitutional Proposals.” – In the Republic v Kojo Mpianim&
anor aka Ghana@50 case, Marful-Sau JA (as he then was).
The
Minority in Parliament wishes to serve notice that we would not relent
in pursuing the series of democratic actions we had earlier announced
until such a time that we are convinced that there is a genuine effort
to hold the cowardly masked perpetrators accountable for their crimes.
We
have all toiled to nurture the democracy which has become a proud
reference of the international community and we are determined to ensure
that rogue elements who seek to erode gains and turn Ghana into a
banana republic are not allowed to succeed.
Signed,
Haruna Iddrisu (MP)
Minority Leader
Source: Ghana/Starrfm.com.gh/103.5FM
The post We won’t help cover criminals – Minority on Short Commission appeared first on Ultimate FM.
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