A Deputy Attorney-General, Mr Godfred Yeboah Dame, has argued before the Supreme Court that the people of Santrokofi Akpafu, Likpe, and Lolobi, (SALL) should have been allowed to vote in the parliamentary election on December 7, 2020.
He contended that the right constituency for the people of SALL to cast their vote was the Buem Constituency in the Oti Region and not the Hohoe Constituency in the Volta Region.
The Deputy A-G was moving an application urging the Supreme Court to quash an injunction by the Ho High Court on the gazetting of Mr John Peter Amewu as the Member of Parliament (MP)-elect for Hohoe.
According to him, it was âerroneousâ for the Electoral Commission (EC) to have prevented the people of SALL from voting in the parliamentary election that took place on December 7,2020.
He argued that a new constitutional instrument CI 128 which came into force on August 11, 2020, placed SALL under the Buem constituency.
âIf anything, the election in Buem should rather be annulled for the people of SALL to vote and not the Hohoe Constituency,â he argued.
Tsikataâs argument
In response, the lawyer for five individuals who got the injunction, Mr Tsatsu Tsikata, argued that the admission by the A-G meant that the people of SALL were indeed denied the right to vote and also the right to be represented in parliament.
He submitted that CI 128 which placed SALL in the Buem constituency was unconstitutional because it was not gazetted on the day it was laid before parliament as required by the 1992 constitution.
The Court, therefore, adjourned to deliver its verdict tomorrow.
Source: GraphicOnline