The Mirror of Justice: Accountability, Political Protests, and the Rule of Law in Ghana

The Indivisibility of the Law

A functional democracy cannot survive on a dual system of justice where accountability is demanded only from political opponents while allies enjoy absolute immunity. Recent political developments in Ghana—most notably the arrest of New Patriotic Party (NPP) National Communications Officer aspirant Dennis Miracles Aboagye by the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO)—have exposed deep-seated double standards in how we view the rule of law. When civic actors or everyday citizens face state crackdowns, legal technicalities are weaponized against them. Yet, when political heavyweights are subjected to the same legal scrutiny, partisan machinery rises in defense, threatening state institutions. We must hold up a mirror to our society: if injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere, then the application of the law must remain blind to political colors. The law is the law.

The Litany of Allegations: Connecting the Dots

Public office is a public trust, and anyone vying to lead or speak for a major political party must be beyond reproach. A critical look at the administrative track record of Dennis Miracles Aboagye reveals an unsettling pattern that warrants thorough, impartial investigation rather than partisan shielding:

While he has since been granted a steep GH¢50 million bail, his supporters immediately resorted to street protests to disrupt state operations.

Holding Up the Mirror: Confronting the Double Standards

The volatile reaction of party loyalists massing outside the EOCO Headquarters raises fundamental questions about civil liberties, police mandate, and institutional consistency in Ghana:

Policy Suggestions and Recommendations

To rescue Ghana’s democratic institutions from partisan decay, systemic reforms must be enforced immediately:

  1. Insulate Anti-Graft Agencies: Institutions like EOCO and the Office of the Special Prosecutor must be legally and financially decoupled from executive influence to allow independent probes into all public officers.
  2. De-polarize Law Enforcement: The Ghana Police Service must apply the Public Order Act uniformly, treating partisan demonstrators with the exact same legal protocols applied to civil society groups.
  3. Strict Asset Recovery: The state must aggressively pursue the verification of sureties and properties for high-profile bail conditions to guarantee the absolute recovery of public assets.
  4. Enforce Internal Party Accountability: Political parties must self-regulate by banning individuals with active, multi-million cedi corruption investigations from vying for national executive positions.
Justice Must Be Blind

Smashing the mirror will not change an ugly reflection. Ghana cannot build a prosperous future on a foundation of selective justice and institutional intimidation. If we only appreciate human rights and due process when our own political allies are affected, we do not care about justice; we only care about power. Dennis Miracles Aboagye, like any citizen, deserves a fair and transparent trial. However, his political status must neither fast-track his clearance nor immunize him from state accountability. Let the state investigate, let the courts adjudicate, and let the law take its course uniformly across all boundaries.

✍️ Retired Senior Citizen
For and on behalf of all Senior Citizens of the Republic of Ghana 🇬🇭

Teshie-Nungua
akpaluck@gmail.com

A Voice for Accountability and Reform in Governance

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

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