The utility, framed as a Judicial Review within the type of a Mandamus, rests on the assertion that the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill has traversed all needed legislative phases as prescribed by Article 106 of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana. The Plaintiff argues that failure to promptly transmit the invoice to the President would represent a breach of parliamentary obligation.
EIB Network’s Legal Affairs Correspondent, Murtala Inusah, clarified {that a} Mandamus utility serves to compel authorities officers to fulfil their obligations or rectify perceived abuses of authority. In this occasion, the MP’s authorized motion underscores the urgency of making certain adherence to constitutional procedures within the dealing with of the Anti-LGBT Bill.
This newest authorized manoeuvre follows a earlier writ initiated by the identical MP on the Supreme Court. In that occasion, the MP sought to restrain the Speaker of Parliament from vetting and approving ministerial nominees, citing considerations over procedural irregularities. However, the Attorney General countered this argument, asserting that Parliament’s functioning remained uninhibited by the Plaintiff’s motion.
The ongoing authorized skirmish highlights the polarizing nature of the Anti-LGBT Bill, which has sparked heated debates throughout Ghanaian society.
Read the reliefs Dafeamekpor is in search of for the courtroom beneath:
I. A declaration that the Parliament of Ghana duly complied with all of the Constitutional provisions stipulated in Article 106 (1), (2), (3), (4), (5) and (6) of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana within the passage of the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill on the twenty eighth of February, 2024.
II. An Order of mandamus directed on the 1st Respondent herein to current the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill to the President of the Republic of Ghana herein in accordance with Article 106 (7) of the 1992 Republic Constitution of Ghana on the premise that the Parliament of Ghana has duly complied with all of the Constitutional provisions stipulated beneath Article 106 (1), (2), (3), (4), (5) and (6) of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana.
III. An Order directed on the President of Ghana to obtain the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill as offered by Parliament in accordance with Article 106 (7) of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana for the needs of his assent or in any other case.
IV. An Order directed on the President of the Republic of Ghana to indicate to the first Respondent herein, inside seven days after the presentation of the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, his assent to the Bill or that he refuses to assent to the invoice in accordance with Article 106 (7) of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana except the Bill is referred by the President to the Council of State pursuant to Article 90 of the Constitution of Ghana.
V. Any different aid(s) this Honourable Court might deem match.