Local News

Bank of Ghana bans 292 individuals & businesses from issuing cheques for three years

The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has announced sanctions against 292 individuals and businesses for persistently issuing dud cheques. In a statement released today, the central bank said the offenders comprise – 47 unnamed individuals and 245 unnamed business entities – that issued dud cheques on at least three occasions between January 2022 and January 2024, despite prior warnings. The sanctions include a three-year ban on issuing cheques in Ghana and accessing new credit facilities from any bank or specialized deposit-taking institution (SDI) in the country. The ban comes into effect on June 28, 2024. The BoG emphasized that these sanctions are in addition to potential legal action under Ghana’s criminal code. Banks and Specialised Deposit-Taking Institutions (SDIs) have been instructed to notify affected customers and collect any unused cheque books. “The public is by this Notice, cautioned to desist from issuing dud cheques as the offence has both legal and regulatory consequences. Bank of Ghana will continue to monitor the payment system space closely and is committed to the promotion of the integrity and soundness of the financial system,” the statement said. Graphiconline.com  

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Koforidua High Court sentences man to life imprisonment for triple murder

The Koforidua High Court, presided over by Justice George Krofa Addae, has sentenced 53-year-old Musa Maliki, also known as Musa Bariki, to life imprisonment for the murders of three individuals, including his 12-year-old girlfriend, in Ayenasu, a village in the Eastern Region. After a fifteen-year trial, the court found Maliki guilty on three counts of murder. The Court said, “By the coming into force the criminal Offences Amendment Act, 2003 the punishment for the offense of murder is life imprisonment in Count 1, Life Imprisonment on count 2, and Life imprisonment on count 3 all to run concurrently”. The case details reveal that both the convict Musa Maliki alias Musa Bariki, and the Issifu Musa in this case were herdsmen at Ayenasu village located along the Afram River bank near Sempoa Deceased Rama Fati age 12, and Baliki Maliki age 18 were siblings whiles Issifu Musa, 20 years age , was their uncle. For months the accused person Musa Maliki who was 38 years then had been making persistent romantic advances to the deceased Fati Rama requesting to marry her but she declined. On 10th October 2009, at about 7:00 pm, Issifu Musa sent Rama Fati and one other to buy Milo for him. Musa Maliki accosted them, dragged Rama Fati into his room, and started beating her up. This information reached Isifu Musa and Baliki Maliki who rushed to rescue the girl from the room of the accused person. This led to a confrontation between them but were separated by some residents. However, the accused person took offense. On the night of October 10-11, 2009, Maliki attacked the victims while they were asleep. He fatally stabbed Baliki Maliki and slit the throat of Rama Fati. Issifu Musa was also murdered when he attempted to confront Maliki. A witness, a 10-year-old luckily managed to escape by hiding on the roof of the room. The accused went into hiding. The Abetifi Police were informed and the Police went for the bodies of the deceased persons and a postmortem was performed on them. The cause of the death of all the deceased persons was given as hemorrhagic shock. On 11th February 2010, the accused person was arrested at Nkawkaw. He confessed to the crimes during police interrogation, was charged with murder, and was found guilty by the Koforidua High Court. Source: Ghana/Starrfm.com.gh/Kojo Ansah  

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Two in court for allegedly siphoning GHC252,923 from company’s account

Three people accused of siphoning GHC 252, 923.92 from the account of Afro Arab Company Limited, a microfinance company, have been hauled to court. At the Dansoman Circuit Court, two out of the three accused persons were present. The two, Michael Kumi Arhin, unemployed, and Michael Assibu, a Finance Manager, have pleaded not guilty to the charges of Conspiracy to commit a crime, to wit, stealing and stealing. One Grace Adade, the third accused person, is said to be at large. Arhin and Assibu who had legal representation, pleaded not guilty before the court presided over by Mrs Halimah El-Alawa Abdul-Baasit. The court has admitted Arhin and Assibu to bail in the sum of GHC300,000 with three sureties, one to be justified with a title deed. It further ordered the two accused persons to be reporting to the Police once every two weeks until directed otherwise. The matter has been adjourned to October 14, 2024, for Case Management (CMC). Earlier, the defence counsel of the accused persons prayed for bail, saying the accused pleaded not guilty to the charges indicating that they have a defence to put up against the charges preferred against them. Defence counsel indicated to the Court that the accused persons were on Police enquiry bail since 2023 when they were arrested. According to defence counsel, the accused persons since then had not attempted to run away from the country “so they are not flight risk at all, and they would make themselves available.” Prosecution led by Chief Inspector Christopher Wonder, did not oppose the bail but stressed that the conditions of the bail should be compelling for them to appear to stand trial any time they were needed. Prosecution said the Police were still looking for the third accused, Grace Adade. As narrated before the court, the prosecution said the complainant was one Ebenezer Egir Tetteh, the General Manager of Afro-Arab Company Limited, Kokomlemle in Accra and the company was into the operation of microfinance, Prosecution said the three accused persons were former employees of the company. It said somewhere in the year 2022, Arhin, a loan officer in the company, created an account in the company’s system for his girlfriend, one Ruth Adomah as a customer with an account with the company. The prosecution said thereafter, Arhin started crediting the said account with a series of monies through the help of Grace Adade who was then a teller with the approval of Assibu, the then Financial Manager. The Court heard the accused persons continued those transactions by crediting the account with several monies and they shared the money among themselves after withdrawal. Prosecution said somewhere in December 2022, Assibu resigned from the company when he sensed danger. In January 2023, one Gabriel Quaye, a witness in the case, took over from Assibu as the Financial Manager in his attempt to prepare financial statements, it was detected that Assibu was still having access to the company’s accounts system. The court heard that on April 28, 2023, the matter was reported to the Police and Arhin and Assibu were arrested but Grace Adade managed to escape. Prosecution said May 29, 2023, an audit was conducted into the company’s account system by an external Auditor, who is also a witness in the case. The prosecution said it was detected that Assibu was still approving transactions made by Grace Adade into the account created by Arhin and five additional accounts by the accused persons as customers of the company in the names of; Mariama Ibrahim, AminaShaibu, Samira Alhassan, Sakinatu Mohammed and Joseph Agbotsey, even as he had resigned from the company. The Court heard that the accused persons succeeded in stealing cash in the sum of GHC252,923.92, belonging to the company. It said during interrogation, the accused persons admitted the offences and refunded GHC72,000 which has been released to the complainant. Prosecution said efforts were being made to arrest Grace Adade who is at large. GNA Related

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Chief Justice opens 12 Small credit and debt recovery courts

The Chief Justice, Her Ladyship Gertrude Torkonoo has opened 12 special courts dedicated to small claims and debt recovery cases. Eight of these courts are located in the Greater Accra Region while four of them are situated in the Ashanti Region. The courts were created following an observation of a spike in small claims cases filed at the district court in Ghana. The increase has been attributed to cases filed by a single company Bills MicroCredit. Justice Esaaba Torkonoo at the opening of the courts noted that ‘the data further revealed that over 70% of the total cases filed by Bills MicroCredit were for claims less than GHC 5,000.” This situation then increased the workload of the district courts which already were overwhelmed, thereby undermining the court shift system that was introduced by the Judicial Service. To address this, the Judicial Service with support from the Bills MicroCredit company created the small claims and debt recovery courts to clear these cases. The courts in the discharge of their duties will sit every working day in the afternoons and on Saturdays. “For the Greater Accra Region, District Court, Ashaiman, District Court, Teshie, District Court, Kasoa and District Court, La, will operate as the Saturday courts while District Court, Weija, District Court, Sowutuom, District Court ‘2’, Adenta and District Court, Gbese will operate as the weekday afternoon courts,” Chief Justice Torkonoo noted during the opening of the courts. The head of the judiciary at the opening of the courts at the La District Courts expressed appreciation to Bills MicroCredit for opting to support the operations of the 12 courts. Meanwhile the CEO of Bills MicroCredit, Richard Quaye, on the other hand, noted that the courts will go a long way to boost their business. He explained that his outfit has so far filed 30,000 cases across the country. ‘One significant challenge we have faced is the sheer volume of defaulters resulting in our need to resort to the courts for recovery — over 30,000 — filed by our company seeking expedited hearings. “The establishment of the new Small Claims Court will greatly alleviate the burden on our judicial system, ensuring that cases are resolved more quickly and efficiently,” Richard Quaye said at the opening of the courts. Citinewsroom

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Farmer convicted for possessing ammunition without authority

Forty-three-year-old David Blagodzi, farmer, has been convicted by the Jasikan Circuit Court to 10 years imprisonment in hard labour for possessing ammunition without authority. Blagodzi, who appeared before the court, presided over by Mr Michael Johnson Abbey, pleaded guilty to the charge and was convicted on his own plea. The court further ordered that the ammunition be sold, and the proceeds deposited into the Consolidated Fund. Prosecuting, Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Seth Vicent Kpodo told the Court that the complainant was the Nkwanta Divisional Police Command while the convict was a farmer resident at Chillinga near Nkwanta in the Oti Region. He said on July 17, at about 1330 hours while the police were on their usual duty point at the Nkwanta barrier on the Nkwanta-Brewaniase Highway, they intercepted a red VW Golf with registration number GE 6527-12 from Brewaniase direction towards Nkwanta with the convict on board. ASP Kpodo said a search was conducted on the vehicle and police found two cartons containing 250 AAA cartridges and 250 00 cartridges were in the convict’s bag placed in front of him in the front seat. He said the convict was arrested and was escorted together with the exhibit to the police station for investigation, during which the convict admitted the offence in his cautioned statement. ASP Kpodo said the convict revealed that he intended to sell the cartridges at Chillinga. The court, before passing judgment, considered that Nkwanta was a restricted area for the use of arms and ammunition in any form because of the conflict. GNA  

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Four arrested for tampering with ECG meter, stealing power worth GH₵77,000

Rulian Shan, the manager of the Chinese firm, along with his sales manager, Ali Yakubu, were detained on Friday, August 2. Four individuals, including three Ghanaians and a Chinese national, have been arrested for tampering with and installing manipulated meters from the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG). Wisdom Sewlorm, an agent, received the ECG meters for installation. However, his employee, Ernest Afatsawu, tampered with them and sold them to a Chinese plastic manufacturing firm for GH₵1,200. Rulian Shan, the manager of the Chinese firm, along with his sales manager, Ali Yakubu, were detained on Friday, August 2. Afatsawu and Sewlorm are currently under investigation. The ECG has estimated the financial loss to be over GH₵77,000 for the period between July and August. The Director of Investigation, Prosecution, and Security, Paul Abariga. stated that the four suspects will be brought to court on Wednesday. Additionally, the contract with the ECG contractor will be terminated. “There are meters being installed in many parts of our operational area, and investigations have revealed that some of these meters are tampered with before installation,” Mr. Abariga said in an interview with Citi FM. “Based on our findings, we arrested these four individuals. They were using a residential meter in a factory to manufacture plastic bowls at Oblogo near Weija.” “We aim to conclude our investigations soon and present them before the court tomorrow,” he added. graphic

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Article: Will our partisan attitudes hurt the courts?

Our partisan edges are getting sharper and political polarisation is deepening. Nothing is spared these days, not even our courts and the judgements they render. It is quite instructive to observe the partisan commentary after every court decision, the most recent being – The Republic vs. Ato Forson & Others. Victory or defeat or whether the court got it right or wrong soon degenerates into a partisan and polarising debate. This comes at a worst time in the history of our courts where public confidence in the institution is low. As per findings from nine rounds of the Afrobarometer survey, here is how Ghanaians are currently feeling about the courts – a) those who say they trust the courts “a lot” has declined by 15 percentage points between Round 1 (1999) and Round 9 (2022); b) the percentage willing to give the courts what I call a clean bill of health on corruption ( those who say none of our judges and magistrates are involved in corruption), has declined from an already low point of 11 per cent (Round 1, 1999) to three per cent (Round 9, 2022); c) the percentage who say people are never treated equally before the law has declined from 39 per cent (Round 1, 1999) to 13 per cent (Round 9, 2022); and d) the percentage who say officials who commit crimes often/always go unpunished has increased significantly from 44 per cent (Round 4, 2008) to 77 per cent (Round 9, 2022). I understand, to an extent, the political temperaments being exhibited by the divisions in the case of The Republic vs. Ato Forson & Others. But it is difficult to excuse it. Moreover, I find it a very worrying trend if we do not curb the extent to which our partisan feelings shape the way we view institutions, and in this case our courts. If we continue down this path, we will end up hurting the courts and its legitimacy with implications for the delivery of justice. The trust underpinnings At the heart of this is partisan nature of trust in the courts. Ghana has conducted nine rounds of the Afrobarometer survey (1999, 2002, 2005, 2008, 2012, 2014, 2017, 2019, and 2022). This means there has been at least one round of the survey conducted during the tenure of presidents we have had during our Fourth Republic. With that in mind, here is how trust in the courts among the divides change when there is political turnover. During the Rawlings era (1999), Ghanaians who described themselves as NDC partisans trusted the courts by 10 percentage points more than self-described NPP partisans. With political turnover, self-described NPP partisans trusted the courts more by eight percentage points on average (2005, 2008) than their NDC counterparts during Kufuor’s tenure. Another political turnover resulted in NDC partisans trusting the courts more than NPP partisans by 10 percentage points (2012) during Mills’ tenure and by 16 percentage points (2014) under John Mahama. The Akufo-Addo era (2017, 2019, and 2022) has been no different albeit by a smaller margin (Three percentage points) on average where NPP partisans now trust the courts slightly more than their NDC counterparts. I often ask, why do partisans appear to trust institutions better when their preferred political party is in power than when it is in opposition? Perhaps the answer to this question can help the country find a lasting solution to this partisan nature of trust. Legitimacy of the courts Amidst the partisan rancour, the overall decline in trust, and the high perceptions of corruption, the courts’ legitimacy in the eyes of Ghanaians remains very strong. Over five rounds of the Afrobarometer survey (2005, 2008, 2012, 2014, 2017), when Ghanaians were asked the extent to which they agreed or otherwise with the notion that “the courts have the right to make decisions that people always have to abide by” the percentage who agreed/strongly agreed ranged between 74 per cent and 82 per cent. Even more comforting is the legitimacy among partisans where among the NPP it ranged between 71 per cent and 80 per cent whiles among the NDC it ranged between 74 per cent and 85 per cent. This strong acceptance of the legitimacy of courts is its current saving grace. But with the increasing partisan and polarised debates over court decisions, how long will this legitimacy remain? How long can the courts survive In my opinion, this barrage of partisan assault? It will be in our best interest to curb our partisan temperaments for the sake of the long-term legitimacy of the courts. This does not absolve the courts of their contribution to the eroding trust in the institution expressed by Ghanaians in general. Institutions grow and strengthen not in moments of our agreements with them but in those difficult moments of disagreements with the judgements they rendered. This is how we must try to treat the courts and all other institutions. The writer is the Project Director, Democracy Project.  

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Judicial Service to establish debt recovery court

The Judicial Service will next week open small claim debt recovery courts to redeem monies borrowed by customers from financial institutions. This is to reduce the number of cases before the courts in the shift system. Mrs Gertrude Torkornoo, the Chief Justice (CJ), said this during a meeting with the Judicial Press Corps. She said since the inception of the Court Shift System this year, 30,000 cases were filed by the Quick Credit Loans, adding that the financial institution intended to file close to 55,000 debt related cases. The CJ said when the court is set up, it would sit on Saturdays and in the afternoons to help deal with the backlog of debt related cases. That, she said, would help move the huge burden on judges, especially at the district courts as well as ensure justice was served on time. Mr Wilberforce Asare, Leader of the Judicial Press Corps, thanked the CJ and management of the Service for the engagement. The Small Claim Debt Recovery courts will be piloted in the Ashanti and Greater Accra Regions. GNA  

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Court automation facilitating justice delivery – Chief Justice

About 71,781 High Court cases have been filed through the electronic-justice (e-justice) system as of July 2024, the Judicial Service of Ghana has said. And out of the total number of 468 courts in the country, 116 of them have been automated with a direct transcription system, bringing the total number of automated courts across the country to 228. Also, efforts are being made to expand the initiative, which was launched in 2019 , to other high courts in the country. This came to light when the Chief Justice, Gertrude Sackey Torkornoo, members of the Judicial Service press corps in Accra on Friday to update the public on efforts to improve justice delivery in Ghana. Various heads of departments and units took turns to share the progress made and projections of other initiatives being undertaken by the service. The Chief Justice commended heads of departments of the JSG for their various roles in making justice delivery seamless for the public. She said the importance of a strong judicial system highlighted the need for a more approachable and less traumatic court experience. “My prayer is that very soon, the people of Ghana will not feel traumatized when they are coming to court. “Coming to court should not be a negative, but simple experience, because the Judicial Service is there to serve the public,” the Chief Justice added. ICT The Director of ICT of the service, Noble Kekeli Nutifafa, said his department was also in the process of introducing other platforms that would allow judges to sign court orders electronically, a system which could be monitored by all parties in real time, including the use of machine learning algorithms to transcribe speech-to-text during proceedings and land database to allow the public to know the status of land cases before buying them. To ensure efficiency, he said a mart office application would also be deployed to tackle administrative memo correspondents and e-signature, among others. The Deputy Director, Archives, of the Judicial Service, Moses Owereko, said the digitalisation of both administrative and court documents had commenced at the Adabraka District Court (formerly Kaneshie District Court), the TDC District Court, the Accra High Court, the Cape Coast High Court and the Judicial Service Head Office. Gender The Director, Monitoring and Evaluation Department of the service, Papa K. Maise, said the number of female judges and magistrates had increased from 194 in 2021/2022 to 218 in the 2022/2023 legal year. “This signifies approximately an equal percentage in terms of gender when it comes to Judges and Magistrates within the Judiciary,” he said. The director added that a new guideline had also been launched to generate suit numbers to make judgments available to the public, adding that his outfit had begun publishing them on two platforms – www.africanlil.org and www.ghalii.org. An officer at the Judicial Training Institute (JTI), Perpetual Quarshie, said since its establishment in 1995, the institute had developed and delivered training programmes for members of the Judicial Service and other stakeholders in the justice administration system. Graphic

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Three remand staffers of Ketu North Municipal hospital given bail

A Circuit Court at Torkor, near Denu in the Ketu South Municipality has granted bail to three staffers of Ketu North Municipal Hospital, who were on remand for extortion and attempt to extort. They were granted bail on Friday in the sum of GHS 200,000 each with two sureties. The trio, Collins Asilevi, a laboratory Technician of the hospital, has John Delu, record keeper and Stella Kale, a Community Health Nurse as accomplices. They pleaded not guilty to the charge and were bailed to re-appear on August 15, this year. They were represented by Mr Senanu Afagbe, who filed an application for their bail and was granted Friday. The trio, who appeared in the Circuit court presided over by Mr Joseph Ofosu Behone, remanded them into Police custody on Monday, July 29, this year, were to return on August 8, before the application for bail by Mr Afagbe. The prosecutor, Chief Inspector, Mr Hamid Mohamed told the Court that the trio conspired and extorted monies from owners of two chemical stores totaling GHC2,000 and GHC1,000 respectively, and went to the third shop at Tadzewu but met resistance, when the owner suspected them and sought advice from the Pharmacy Council and the Food and Drugs Authority. The fleeing trio were chased and arrested at Weta junction and handed over to the Police, and upon investigations were charged with extortion. The trio are expected to appear on August 15. GNA  

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