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Another 'Opuni' judge, Justice Aboagye Tandoh, among 20 nominees for Court of Appeal announced by Akufo-Addo

71694887 Justice Aboagye Tandoh

Tue, 9 Apr 2024 Source: classfmonline.com

President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has nominated Justice Aboagye Tandoh, the current judge overseeing the six-year-old GHS217-million 'causing financial loss' case involving former Ghana Cocoa Board Chief Executive Dr Stephen Opuni and businessman Seidu Agongo, as one of 19 nominees for the Court of Appeal.

Other nominees include His Lordship Justin Dorgu J, Her Ladyship Gifty Dekyem J, His Lordship Kofi Akowah J, His Lordship Gyamfi-Danquah J, and Her Ladyship Olivia Obeng Owusu J.

Also included are Lady Cecilia Davis J, Lord George Krofa Addae J, Lord Alexander Osei Tutu J, Lord Francis Obiri J, Lord Kwasi Boakye J, and Lady Lydia Osei-Marfo J.

Other members of the group, who are not judges, consist of Mariam Agyeman Gyasi Jawhary, Yaa Onyameye Gyakobo, Charles Zwennes, Yaw Oppong, Nathan Parker Yarney, David Boafo, Francis Koffie, and Dr. Poku Adusei.

Justice Aboagye Tandoh has assumed responsibility for the COCOBOD case, replacing the previous judge, Justice Kwasi A. Gyimah, who was later transferred to the Ashanti Region by Chief Justice Gertrude Torkonoo when she took office.

Justice Gyimah had ruled, after taking over the case from now-retired Justice Honyenuga, that the matter be held de novo (from scratch) due to several complaints of bias against Justice Honyenuga by the accused persons in the course of the trial.

The Attorney General challenged that ruling successfully at the Supreme Court, which ruled that the case should continue from where Justice Honyenuga left it.

Just like they complained about Justice Honyenuga's alleged bias, the accused persons have also had to label Justice Tandoh as biased and even filed applications for his recusal to no avail.

In one such case, Dr Opuni filed a motion to get Justice Tandoh off the trial, citing a "real likelihood of bias" on the judge's part.

The former chief executive officer of the Ghana Cocoa Board applied on October 27, 2023.

Dr Opuni (the first accused person), who is in court together with Mr Agongo and the latter's company, Agricult Ghana Limited, on 27 counts, including willfully causing financial loss to the state and contravention of the Public Procurement Act in the purchase of Lithovit liquid fertiliser between 2014 and 2016, averred that the current judge exhibited conduct that shows he cannot be a fair arbiter in the matter, and, thus, wanted him to recuse himself from the case.

Among other things, Dr Opuni put forth in his affidavit in support of the recusal motion: "I state that the conduct of the trial judge, particulars of which are contained hereinabove, leads to only one conclusion; which is that: I will not be given a fair trial, as he has been very unfair to me by way of not only seeking to intimidate and embarrass my counsel but further that he intends to rush through the trial and thereafter convict me".

The recusal hearing was billed for November 13, 2023. However, Justice Tandoh used his "discretion" to abridge the return date to Wednesday, November 1, 2023, much to the chagrin of the lead counsel for Mr Agongo and Agricult, Mr Benson Nutsukpui, a former President of the Ghana Bar Association, who had, in previous sittings, accused the judge of introducing "alien" and "totally unknown" practices into the matter.

Justice Tandoh ordered the court registry to serve the second and third accused persons with the recusal motion by the end of the day when Mr Nutsukpui told the court on Monday, October 30, 2023, that his side had not been served.

However, Mr Nutsukpui tried to draw Justice Tandoh's attention to the practice of giving the parties in a case three days to respond to such applications, but the judge stood his ground.

"Even the three clear days have been denied us?" Mr Nutsukpui quizzed, to which the judge declared: "I have exercised my discretion".

The president makes appointments to the Court of Appeal in consultation with the Judicial Appointments Advisory Board (JAAB), which the Chief Justice of Ghana heads.

Section 3 of Article 144 of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana states: "Justices of the Court of Appeal and of the High Court and Chairmen of Regional Tribunals shall be appointed by the President acting on the advice of the Judicial Council."

Akufo-Addo promotes Honyenuga

Just as in the case of Justice Tandoh, in March 2020, President Nana Akufo-Addo appointed then-Court of Appeal judge Clemence J. Honyenuga to the bench of the Supreme Court, along with three others: Yoni Kulendi, private legal practitioner; Justice Issifu Omoro Tanko Amadu of the Court of Appeal; and Professor Henrietta Mensa-Bonsu, a law lecturer at the Faculty of Law of the University of Ghana, Legon and President of the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences.

They were later vetted and approved by parliament and subsequently sworn into office.

At the time, Justice Honyenuga was the trial judge in the controversial case.

Justice Honyenuga, the first judge to sit on the matter, had heard it for at least two years, going into his third year.

Prior to his promotion, Justice Honyenuga, who is also the Paramount Chief of the Nyagbo Traditional Area, had been condemned by the main opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) in the Volta Region for singing the praise of the president and advocating a second term for him, contrary to the Judicial Code of Conduct.

Justice Honyenuga, in his welcome address to President Akufo-Addo at a durbar of chiefs and people of the Afajato South District earlier that year, said: "We wish to congratulate you for the excellent manner you are governing this dear country of ours, Ghana, and the significant gains made in the economy in your first term," adding: "It is true that you have won high admiration, not only in Africa but also in advanced democracies.

"Your flagship programmes like the Free Senior High School, Planting for Food and Jobs, which have increased food production and even led to exports; One District-One Factory, among others, has (sic) increased food production and has (sic) improved the standard of living of many Ghanaians," he said.

"Indeed," he added, "for special mention is the Free SHS, which has broken boundaries and has greatly bridged the gap between the rich and the poor," observing that "this programme has also broken the record, which was held by the first President of the Republic of Ghana, Dr Kwame Nkrumah, who gave free education to our brothers and sisters in the northern part of Ghana."

The judge cum chief continued: "Your Free SHS programme is unprecedented in the history of Ghana, in a first term, as it covers the whole country."

"We wish to congratulate you on the excellent manner you are governing this dear country of ours; it is our hope that with your vision and the gains made in your first term, Ghanaians may consider giving you another four years," he stated.

While being vetted for the appointment, Justice Clemence Honyenuga said if the speech he read on behalf of the chiefs and people of Afadjato a few months prior, which, in his view, was misconstrued as his personal endorsement of President Nana Akufo-Addo, made some people unhappy, then he was sorry for those remarks.

"[For] my part, if, out of political dissatisfaction, some people are unhappy with whatever I am supposed to have said, then I am sorry," Justice Honyenuga told Parliament's Appointments Committee on Monday, May 11, 2020, while being vetted.

According to him, he did not endorse the presidency of Nana Akufo-Addo in his personal capacity.

He explained that the media misrepresented him and did not state that the endorsement was not his but a speech he was elected to read on behalf of the chiefs.

The judge also indicated that the assertion that the president visited his traditional area was untrue, as the president visited the Afadjato area, where he was selected to speak on behalf of the traditional leaders.

Source: classfmonline.com
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