Accra, March 11, - Judges of the
lower courts have served notices to withdraw their services from March 21, this
year, if issues concerning their salaries and working conditions were not
addressed.
They have also decided to
withdraw from further salary negotiations because after meeting several times
with the Joint Judicial Council and Government Negotiating Team between
February 26 and March 2, this year, nothing concrete had been achieved.
A source close to the judges and
magistrates further noted that; “The Government Team has shown a marked
unwillingness to resolve the salary issues of the lower bench” and that could
be seen by their failure to produce expected figures for this year’s salary
levels as discussed and previously agreed on.
A letter cited by the Ghana News
Agency said the Government Team have “shifted goal posts regarding agreed
positions on specific issues at previous meetings and employed certain
manoeuvres and given various excuses to delay the lower bench of what is
rightfully ours.”
To the members of the lower bench
what they found more alarming was that, government had also refused to pay
salary figures proposed by the Judicial Council for the year 2016 and same,
which had been approved by Parliament in the Appropriation Act, effective from
January this year, it said.
In the letter copied to the Chief
Justice, Judicial Council, Chief of Staff, and Ministry of Finance, among
others, the judges recounted that historically their dealings with the Ministry
of Finance since 2013 had been characterised by the “deliberate invention of
errors and mistakes, withdrawal of salaries, reduction in salaries and delay
tactics.”
“We find that these actions of
the Government are a violation of Article 149 of the 1992 Constitution.
“It is our view that government‘s
attitude frustrates the work of the Judicial Council on salaries of the lower
bench by treating the work of the Council itself and lower bench with
contempt,’’ the letter said.
The members of the lower bench
have, therefore, called for immediate payment of the 2016 salaries levels
captured in the 2018 Budget as approved by Parliament.
The source said challenges faced
by members of the lower bench that had not been addressed include lack of
personal security for judges and magistrates, lack of armed security in the
courts, poor conditions of courtrooms and chambers and non availability of risk
allowances due to the nature of their work.
Members of the lower bench have
served several notices to embark on strike over their salaries and conditions
of services since 2013.
Soon after declaring their
intentions, they are invited to the negotiating table but after these various
meetings, implementation of issues discussed are left hanging.
GNA

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