Kumasi Jurors Withdraw Service

Jurors at Kumasi High courts have withdrawn their services to protest the failure of the Judicial Service to pay their sitting allowances of GH�10 per day. According to some of the jurors, since the legal year began in January, they had not been paid their allowances. There are about 20 jurors in Kumasi who sit three times a week to adjudicate cases involving murder and manslaughter. With about two weeks to end the legal year, the strike by the jurors is posing a challenge to the Attorney-General's (A-G's) Department in Kumasi, as it is now unable to pursue the prosecution of about 20 murder and manslaughter cases scheduled to be heard during this year's criminal assizes. Murder cases pending before the courts include that involving the former Ashanti Regional Chairman of the Ghana Journalists Association, Samuel Enin, who was slain at a drinking spot on February 9, 2007. A source at the Judicial Service confirmed the strike in an interview with the Daily Graphic but failed to give details. Prosecutors have closed their cases in 10 of the listed cases, with the others due for addresses. Witnesses from Accra, the north and other parts of the country who had travelled to Kumasi to be cross-examined on murder, manslaughter and robbery cases had to return disappointed when they learnt about the industrial action by the jurors. Not even the intervention of the Registrar of the Ashanti Regional High Court, Mr Francis Gadzeah, that efforts were being made to address the concerns of the jurors could soften their hearts.