Suhum Magistrate Court must be shut Down – Researcher 

President of Ghana Bar Association, (GBA) Yaw Acheampong Boafo pledge to use its experience in digitizing its administrative platforms and services across the country.

Suhum Magistrate Court must be shut Down – Researcher 
Yaw Acheampong Boafo

A researcher has recommended the closure of the Suhum Magistrate court located next to Amponsah Market centre in Suhum, in the Eastern region of Ghana due to excessive noise, inconvenient environment, and deplorable condition of the courtroom.

The washroom was described as terribly bad while the structure continue to deteriorate.

This was made known during a presentation on research findings commission on the state of court facilities in the Eastern region submitted by Dr Kwaku Agyemang Budu during the 13th Annual Chief Justice’s Forum in Koforidua on Thursday, November 18, 2021, under the theme “Justice for All Under Constitutional Rule; Making justice Delivery Accessible in a Pandemic “.

The findings revealed a general heavy caseload, poor infrastructure, lack of proper maintenance culture, poor security, lack of furniture, equipment, and stationery needs, deplorable washrooms, and encroachment.

Speaking on the theme, Justice for All Under Constitutional Rule; Making justice Delivery, the Chief Justice of Ghana, Justice Anin-Yeboah stated, that Ghana must take leverage the opportunity covid-19 presents to roll out an electronic-justice delivery system across the country to enhance transparency, effectiveness, and accessibility.

The Chief Justice acknowledged the e-justice system being piloted at the Law Court Complex in Accra by the Judicial Service of Ghana in partnership with the Ministry of Communication and World Bank, however, stated that the challenges unleashed by the Covid-19 pandemic to justice delivery in Ghana present opportunity for Ghana to fully integrate Information, Communication, and Technology (ICT) in justice delivery.

“Covid-9 has forged a whole new world with an increasing reliance on technology. The legal profession must therefore give us technological advancement and adapt to the times, and the Judiciary must be at the forefront of this. Admittedly, change will however not come suddenly but will most likely be in gradual process” Justice Anin-Yeboah said.

Launching deeply he contacted “the inevitability of this change, nevertheless, means that it is necessary to adequately and continuously prepare ourselves for an ever-changing world where we must of necessity take the lead in deploying technology to ensure efficiency in Justice Delivery for our people in Ghana. A concerted effort is however required by all stakeholders in other to leverage the opportunity covid -19 presents for delivering technology-based justice delivery system into the future”.

President of Ghana Bar Association, (GBA) Yaw Acheampong Boafo, underscored the importance of technology to access to justice delivery, hence pledged the commitment of the Association to use its experience in digitizing its administrative platforms and services across the country to redirect, facilitate, and source funding for the establishment of tailor-made e-justice system suitable to the judicial environment in the country.

“It has been over 10 years and lawyers do not have access to the use of e-justice from their chambers as promised.

 We still have to print papers, travel to the law court complex in Accra to file processes Lawyers have to travel to court only to be told the Judge is not sitting. Although the Project has been launched, we are aware that the programmers from Zimbabwe are yet to do an end-to-end demonstration system. We, therefore, need to assemble our judges, lawyers, judicial administrators, and paralegals and not depend on outsiders no matter how skilful they are. We need to design our systems and specify how we want the system to feel like and look like”.

The Chairperson of NCCE, Josephine Nkrumah called for deliberate interventions to increase access to justice delivery to women and the marginalized.

She also appealed for the reintroduction of the training of NCCE staff to participate in dispensing resolution through Alternate Dispute Resolution (ADR).

The President of the Eastern Regional House of Chiefs, Nene Sakite II, Kornor of Manya Krobo Traditional Area, who was chairman of the occasion, called for continued expansion of frontiers of Justice, increase access, and ensure that the law becomes natural resources for citizens in search of resolution and justice.

He said the more citizens have confidence in the law courts the fewer attempts to take the laws into their own hands.

William Ofori Akwaboa, Eastern Regional Correspondent