Ghana’s sovereignty, as enshrined in its Constitution, is a promise woven from the threads of an independent judiciary, a diligent legislature, and a responsive executive. It is a house built on the principle of checks and balances, where no single pillar is meant to overshadow the others.
The lawsuit by Justice Torkornoo, a judge seeking redress against the very system she once presided over, forces the nation to look in the mirror. It asks whether this house is a fortress of justice or a house of cards, where the power of the presidency can topple the highest judicial office with a single breath.
The lawsuit, in this sense, is not just a personal quest for vindication but a Socratic dialogue with the nation’s soul.
The conflict between the Chief Justice and the executive is akin to a clash of titans. One, a champion of the law and its sacred independence; the other, a wielder of political might, entrusted with the welfare of the nation.
The outcome of this legal battle will be a watershed moment in Ghana’s history. It will either reaffirm the judiciary as a sanctuary of justice, a place where even the most powerful can be held to account, or it will cement the perception that the scales of justice are not, in fact, blind, but are instead tilted by the heavy hand of political expediency.
The paradox here is that the very system designed to protect the independence of the judiciary is being used to challenge its perceived erosion.
For Ghana to truly be a sovereign nation, its judicial system must be a bulwark against tyranny and a bastion of democratic values without inference from external forces. The judiciary must be a garden of integrity, where decisions are based on the fertile soil of the Constitution, not the shifting sands of political favouritism.
Justice Torkorno’s lawsuit, irrespective of its final verdict, serves as a poignant reminder that eternal vigilance is the price of liberty. It is a proverb in action, cautioning that a nation that allows its judicial independence to wither away is a nation whose sovereignty is but a whisper in the wind.
The nation must stand as one to ensure that the judiciary remains a flame that cannot be extinguished by the winds of political change.
































