Executive Director of the Ghana Centre for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana), Professor Henry Kwasi Prempeh, has said the action to get the law that established the General Legal Council (GLC) amended is a smart way to respond to real and pressing public problems without waiting endlessly on government initiative.
Prof Prempeh had earlier called for an amendment of the Act when he was speaking on the Key Points on TV3 on Saturday, October 30.
He told host Dzifa Bampoh that “I am delighted to see Parliament really weigh in on this matter. This is a long-running battle, and I think that it is good to have the political class weigh in on this way”.
“Parliament makes decisions in a number of ways they can pass a bill if signed it becomes an Act of Parliament. It also operates by passing resolutions. Some of the resolutions are binding; some are not binding.
“This is one of the resolutions in the latter category; it is not binding. But, it does register Parliament’s collective disapproval of the way and manner in which a statutory body like the GLC has been handling this matter of access to legal education.”
He added, “The GLC is a statutory body that was established by an Act of Parliament. It has been many years since the Act was passed”.
“I will welcome another look at that Act. It is Parliament’s own Act; they can therefore also go beyond passing a resolution to actually amend the Act. These days, they have the right to initiate Private Members’ bills. I will think that this will be a very candidate for such a Bill”.
“So, they should actually move beyond and put some bite behind their words. They can take another look at the legal profession Act or whichever act the GLC is established under and basically make the necessary amendments to that Act or enact a whole new law to regulate the legal profession. So I think it is a good first step.”
Reacting to a move by South Danyi Member of Parliament, Rockson-Nelson Dafeamekpor, to get the law reviewed, Prof Prempeh, who is also a private legal practitioner, said in a Facebook post on Monday, November 1 that “Political low-hanging fruit. A good candidate for a Private Member’s Bill indeed! One that I can, at least in principle, support in good conscience.
“It is to enable MPs to step forward with such legislative responses to real and pressing public problems without waiting endlessly on Government initiatives that many of us long advocated for a more reasonable reading of Article 108. Smart move! Exactly what I advocated on Dzifa Gbeho-Bampoh’s TV3 program on Saturday following passage of the non-binding resolution by Parliament.”
His colleague legal practitioner, who is also the Vice President of Imani Africa, Mr Kofi Bentil, also welcomed the move to review the law.
He said in a Facebook post that “Way to go”.
Mr Dafeamekpor had presented a memo to Parliament to develop private members bill as part of a move to get the law setting up the GLC reviewed.
The opposition lawmaker is, among other things, seeking to remove from the Chief Justice and other justices of the Supreme Court from the GLC.
The memo dated October 26 2021, and written to the Clerk of Parliament said, “Sir, we write to request the legislating drafting office to draft for subsequent submission to the Speaker, a bill to amend the Legal Professions Act 1960 Act 32 to exclude the Chief Justice as well as other justices of the Supreme Court from the GLC to redefine the functions of the GLC and to provide for reforms in legal education such that accredited Faculties of law with the requisite facilities would be licensed to run professional law courses, provide for discipline of lawyers and related matters to give effect to Articles 37(1) of the 1992 constitution.”
The House on Friday, October 29, resolved that all LLB students who obtained the 50 per cent pass mark in the law school entrance examinations should be admitted. The unanimous decision was arrived at by voice votes in Parliament.
The unanimous decision was arrived at by a voice vote in Parliament.
Regarding this resolution, the Attorney General, Godfred Yeboah Dame, had told Parliament that their decision is not compulsory for the GLC to implement.
The AG indicated that Parliament is devoid of the power through the use of Parliamentary resolutions to control the process of admission into the Ghana School of Law.
But in a response, the AG said, “Respectfully, I am aware of a resolution passed by Parliament at its sitting on Friday, October 29, 2021, in these terms: … The General Legal Council is hereby directed to proceed and admit all the students who passed in accordance with the advertised rules of the examinations… The Attorney-General is the leader of the bar in Ghana, and he must see to it that the directive that 499 students who scored 50 marks are admitted is complied with.
“We do not want to get to contempt of Parliament issues. Whilst recognizing the general legislative powers of Parliament in Ghana, except as have been circumscribed by the Constitution, I am constrained to advise that Parliament is devoid of power through the use of Parliamentary resolutions to control the process of admission into the Ghana School of Law”.
“The mode of exercising legislative power enshrined in article 106 of the Constitution does not admit of resolutions”.
“In accordance with section 13(1)(e) and (f) of the Legal Profession Act, 1960 (Act 32), the power to regulate the admission of students to pursue courses of instruction leading to qualification as lawyers and to hold examinations which may include preliminary, intermediate and final examinations has been vested in the General Legal Council.
It is correct that section 1(5) of Act 32 stipulates thus: “The Council shall in the performance of their functions comply with any general directions given by the Minister”.
In my respectful opinion, this provision underscores the capacity of the Executive, not the Legislature, through the Minister responsible for the General Legal Council, i.e. the Attorney-General and Minister for Justice, to direct and advise the Council on major matters of national importance.
In this regard, it is pertinent to indicate that by a letter dated October 18 2021, received at my office on October 21 2021, His Excellency the President forwarded the contents of a petition by the “499 candidates” to me for my comments in order to enable him to respond. Another petition dated October 20 2021, by the National Association of Law Students was also delivered to the President.
“Upon delivery of my comments on the matters raised in both petitions and following further consultations with my good self, by a letter dated October 26 2021 (three clear days before the resolution of Parliament), received at my office on October 27 2021, the President directed me to, pursuant to section 1(5) of Act 32, … make the necessary intervention to the General Legal Council, on behalf of the 499 students, to address the issue”.
“Within the constraints of the law, I am following up on the directive of the President to make the necessary interventions on behalf of the ‘499 students’ Be that as it may, it is imperative to correct a few erroneous impressions contained in the impugned Parliamentary resolution of October 29 2021. The notice in the Daily Graphic of May 14, 2021, inviting applications from suitably qualified Ghanaians for admission into the Ghana School of Law did not state a pass mark of fifty per cent (50%) or any at all as a basis for admission. The notice stated that applicants may be granted admission if they have passed the entrance examination conducted by the GLC.
“The notice also did not state the manner in which a pass mark set by the GLC would be determined. It is clear, therefore, that a contention that the “originally announced” or “advertised” pass mark was “50%” is erroneous and insupportable.
In so far as any matter bordering on a ‘pass mark’ is concerned, the notice in the Daily Graphic stated as follows:
“E. ADMISSION PROCEDURE”
The admission process is as follows:
(i) The General Legal Council determines the number of candidates to be admitted to the Professional Law Course for the academic year.
(ii) Applicants may be granted admission if they have passed the written examinations organized by the General Legal Council for the
2021/2022 Academic Year, on payment of the required fee and submission of the application form and all supporting documents required online.
During the debate on the floor of the House on Friday, October 29, Member of Parliament for Asawase, Alhaji Muntaka Mubarak, told the GLS and the Law school that the study of law in Ghana is not limited to a select few.
He said all Ghanaians are allowed to pursue legal education and education in general.
He said, “I know that there are a lot of institutions in this country that are very conservatives, but with the kind of problem we have as a country, you cannot give a conservative position and expert to make progress. This idea, with the greatest respect to the former Chief Justice, that we won’t open up for anybody to become a lawyer. Who is anybody? Every Ghanaian matter just as your son and daughters.
“It is not the sons of lawyers and doctors or politicians or the influential that have the only right to be able to have access to any profession in this country. If they don’t know, we must tell them that they should go and admit everybody who has passed before the next academic year starts.
Deputy Majority Leader Alexander Afenyo-Markin said the GLC and the Ghana School of Law would be acting in bad faith if they fail to heed the resolution passed by Parliament for all the LLB students who obtained the 50 per cent pass mark to be admitted into the law school.
“We are telling the Ghana law school that they continuously frustrating students; they are making the study of law unattractive. I know that the post-call students they had started lectures, they started last week, but for the Professional law they are starting next week,” he said on the floor of the House.
“It is not too late to admit them because they have passed,” he added.
In a subsequent interview with TV3’s Komla Klutse, Mr Afenyo-Markin said, “For anybody who may think that they may exercise a discretion not to respect our directive, I will say, that will be in bad faith for them to fail to respect this directive of Parliament.
“We have a responsibility, and we are simply re-echoing what they themselves have said publicly. That is why we added that yes, the Learned Attorney General with oversight responsibility should ensure that they comply with the resolution passed by Parliament.
“If a body, recognized by law, will refuse a resolution of Parliament, then I think that body does not believe in the rule of law, and I don’t think that is what the General Legal Council and Ghana School of Law will do. It has the Chief Justice as its head, and we believe that he as Chair will take this in good faith and quickly take steps to address this.
“I will not want to go into the issue of contempt, whether if they fail, we would have to take another step. We know that the Constitution is clear on failing to comply with parliamentary orders, but I don’t think we will get there.”
This development emerged at a time the Human Rights Division of the Accra High Court adjourned the case brought before it by some ‘failed’ LLB students against the General Legal Council (GLC) and the Attorney General (AG).
On Friday, October 29, the court presided over by Justice Nicholas Mensah Abodakpi adjourned the case to November 9 after the Attorney General requested for a short adjournment to file certain processes.
“With the consent of the parties and their lawyers, this case would be adjourned to November 9, 2021,” the judge is reported to have said.
The students are demanding that the court “further retrains the respondents from treating the applicants as students who failed the said examinations pending the final examination of this matter on grounds set forth and such further orders the court may deem fit.”
They also want a declaration that the failure of the 2nd Respondent (the Attorney General) to reign in the 1st Respondent for the conduct of the 1st Respondent as stated constitutes a dereliction of the 2nd Respondent’s duties under Act 32.