Ghana's Supreme Court has declared all criminal offences in the country's statute books as bailable,
in a landmark decision that is set to give alleged rapists, murderers, pirates
and armed robbers among others, the opportunity to be given bail by the courts.
The highest court by
a five-two majority, declared Section 97 (7) of the Criminal Procedure
and Juvenile Justice Act [Act 30] unconstitutional, and accordingly struck
it out from the statutes.
Consequent to the
decision, all courts that have jurisdiction to try and hear cases such as
murder, rape, treason, piracy, defilement, and narcotics will from Thursday,
May 5 have the jurisdiction to grant bail in those cases.
Prior to today's
decision, such cases were deemed non-bailable, except in few circumstances such
as when there is unreasonable delay in the trial or when the facts of the case
do not support the charges.
The law
Section 96(7)
of Act 30 (as amended) - A court shall refuse to grant bail
(a) in a case
of treason, subversion, murder, robbery, hijacking, piracy, rape and defilement
or escape from lawful custody; or [As amended by the Criminal Procedure Code
(Amendment) Act, 2002 (Act 633), s. (7)].
(b) where a
person is being held for extradition to a foreign country.
But private legal practitioner,
Martin Kpebu challenged that February last year in a suit in which he prayed
court to pronounce Section 96(7) of the Criminal Procedure and Juvenile Justice
Act unconstitutional.
His argument was
premised on the grounds that an accused person per the country's constitution,
is deemed innocent until proven guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction
hence it was unjustifiable to curtail an accused person's freedom through
remand.
Thursday's ruling is
likely to open the floodgates for accused persons whose cases are being tried
and languishing in remand to initiate bail applications.
Sources: tv3network.com
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