Kumasi, Jan 4, GNA - Mr Kwadwo Appiah-Kubi, defeated National Democratic Congress (NDC) parliamentary candidate for the Offinso North constituency in the 2004 elections, has expressed displeasure about the delay in the electoral petition he filed in January 2005 in a Kumasi High Court challenging the result which declared Dr Kofi Konadu Apraku of the NPP winner by the Electoral Commission (EC).
He said since he filed the writ, the case had been adjourned five times and in all these no judge appeared in court and that this situation makes him believe that there was "something wrong somewhere" about the case. Addressing a press conference in Kumasi on the case on Wednesday, Mr Appiah-Kubi cited a similar case in 1996 at Ayawaso West Wuogon constituency in Accra in which Mr Isaac Amoo, then NPP parliamentary candidate challenged the result, which declared Mrs Rebecca Adotey, the NDC candidate winner. Mr Appiah-Kubi said judgement in that case was given four years later and therefore called on Parliament, the Judiciary and other law making bodies to come out with laws that will ensure that legal matters concerning the election of public officials are addressed within the shortest possible time.Kumasi, Jan 4, GNA - Mr Kwadwo Appiah-Kubi, defeated National Democratic Congress (NDC) parliamentary candidate for the Offinso North constituency in the 2004 elections, has expressed displeasure about the delay in the electoral petition he filed in January 2005 in a Kumasi High Court challenging the result which declared Dr Kofi Konadu Apraku of the NPP winner by the Electoral Commission (EC).
He said since he filed the writ, the case had been adjourned five times and in all these no judge appeared in court and that this situation makes him believe that there was "something wrong somewhere" about the case. Addressing a press conference in Kumasi on the case on Wednesday, Mr Appiah-Kubi cited a similar case in 1996 at Ayawaso West Wuogon constituency in Accra in which Mr Isaac Amoo, then NPP parliamentary candidate challenged the result, which declared Mrs Rebecca Adotey, the NDC candidate winner. Mr Appiah-Kubi said judgement in that case was given four years later and therefore called on Parliament, the Judiciary and other law making bodies to come out with laws that will ensure that legal matters concerning the election of public officials are addressed within the shortest possible time.