The High Court in Accra presided by Justice Ofori Atta will on July 15 decide whether to uphold a stay of proceedings against a motion by Mr. Tsatsu Tsikata, the former Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation to put Justice Mrs Henrietta Abban of the Fast Track High Court on a mini trial for alleged bias.
Tsatsu was jailed five years by Justice Abban on 18th June, 2008, after she found him guilty of wilfully causing financial loss to the State.
But Tsatsu has since accused the judge of bias in the trial and refused her hearing an application for bail pending appeal against his conviction.
He subsequently petitioned the Chief Justice, Mrs Georgina Wood to intervene, however, the CJ advised that the matter should be determined by a court of competent jurisdiction rather than administratively.
The CJ further advised that the matter be placed before a court of competent jurisdiction in order that the grave issues that had been raised be determined judicially for the appropriate orders to be made.
In court on Thursday, Tsatsu impressed upon Justice Ofori Atta to grant his request for a mini trial for Mrs. Justice Henrietta Abban to enable him prove the allegation of bias against her.
But the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Joe Ghartey, applied to the court to stay proceedings on the mini trial because the reliefs sought by Tsatsu’s were the same reliefs in another he has filed before the Supreme Court, urging the high court therefore to await the decision of the Supreme Court.
But Tsatsu said the Attorney General was wrong in equating the two cases because the application before the Supreme Court was seeking to quash the decision of Justice Abban to go ahead with judgement while part of the trial was pending before the Supreme Court.
He said his application at the Supreme Court was not to quash the judgement of Justice Abban but to correct the administrative lapse in her usurping the powers of the superior court.
In an affidavit supporting his motion for a mini trial, Tsatsu stated that “The issue of a bias by a judge is, indeed, a serious matter that is provided for in Article 296(b) of the Constitution. It is fundamental to the ends of justice that a judge proceed with an open judicial mind, untainted by bias, which is not the case with Mrs. Justice Henrietta Abban as far as this application is concerned and as far as I am concerned.”
Author: Isaac Yeboah
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Kadjebi NCCE engages political party youth activists on peace, tolerance
28 mins -
Krachi East: NCCE educates voters on proper voting procedures
36 mins -
NCCE organises debate for Kwesimintsim parliamentary candidates
39 mins -
Wa Naa, Y-PES Ghana launch Youth for Peace Declaration campaign
41 mins -
Inflation, concentration risk erode pension investment returns – GSE Boss
45 mins -
‘Stay away if you don’t have the temperament to accommodate journalists’ — GJA Prez to election stakeholders
48 mins -
Illegal miners attempt to mine at Neung South Forest Reserve
51 mins -
Cardinal Namdini reiterates responsible mining, local content as it pours first gold
54 mins -
Demand accountability after elections – NCCE Chairperson urges Ghanaians
57 mins -
I never begged for forgiveness to appease the soul of J.B Danquah Adu – ‘Sexy don don’
60 mins -
Gideon Boako donates jerseys and footballs to support Duayaw Nkwanta teams
1 hour -
Union Ghana triumphs in inaugural University of Ghana Community Games
6 hours -
GPL 2024/25: Young Apostles look to upset Samartex in Samreboi
6 hours -
GPL 2024/25: Medeama aim to halt GoldStars’ unbeaten run in Western derby
7 hours -
AFCON 2025Q: Jordan, Alidu, Gideon and Fatawu ruled out of Niger’s clash
7 hours