The Special Committee that investigated disturbances at the vetting sessions conducted by the Appointments Committee has finished its open hearings. Minority members decided to boycott the sessions as they doubted the impartiality of committee chair Emmanuel Bedzrah.
Chairman Bedzrah declared to the media that the committee would continue its work and present its detailed findings according to schedule even without Minority participation.
He stressed that parliamentary integrity needs protection while these types of incidents need a full investigation to stop similar incidents from happening again.
The absence of the Parliament Clerk during hearings caused major difficulties since he was supposed to give testimony. The committee doubts the completeness of their investigation because of its key member’s absence.
The investigation began after a vetting session on January 30 turned disorderly when the Minority and Majority members of the Appointments Committee started fighting physically against each other. Parliamentary property such as tables and microphones suffered harm during the physical altercation which caused Speaker Alban Bagbin to suspend four Members of Parliament.
Rockson-Nelson Dafeamekpor joined Frank Annoh-Dompreh as well as Alhassan Tampuli and Jerry Ahmed Shaib on the list of MPs suspended by Speaker Alban Bagbin.
The Speaker’s choice to suspend the MPs was met with grievances from some quarters. Former Majority Leader Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu puzzled the Speaker’s authority to impose such sanctions, arguing that neither the Standing Orders nor the Constitution grants him this strength.
In reaction to the incident, the Appointments Committee issued a proper apology to Ghanaians for the disruptions all through the vetting session.
They assured the public that measures might be implemented to save you similar occurrences within the future and to uphold the integrity of the vetting process.
As the parliamentary network awaits the committee’s report, there may be a collective desire that the findings will provide clarity at the events and provide pointers to make certain the decorum and effectiveness of destiny parliamentary complaints.
The incident has underscored the need for strong mechanisms to control disagreements within parliamentary committees and to hold public self assurance within the legislative technique.
The conclusion of the inquiry marks a substantial step in the direction of addressing the troubles that led to the chaos in the course of the vetting process. It is expected that the committee’s findings will make contributions to strengthening parliamentary approaches and stopping such incidents in the future.