Accra, 24 July, 2025 / 8:20 pm (ACI Africa).
Members of the Ghana Catholic Bishops’ Conference (GCBC) have criticized the controversial suspension of the country’s Chief Justice in April, stating that the President’s decision has sparked “widespread public anxiety” across the West African nation.
In a Tuesday, July 22 statement, GCBC members weigh in on the suspension of Chief Justice Gertrude Torkornoo, which is reportedly grounded in three separate petitions calling for a formal investigation in accordance with Ghana’s Constitution.
“The Conference is deeply disturbed by the circumstances surrounding the suspension of the Chief Justice. This unprecedented action has provoked widespread public anxiety,” GCBC members say in the statement that their President, Bishop Matthew Kwasi Gyamfi of Ghana’s Sunyani Catholic Diocese, signed.
While acknowledging the “legal right of the executive to initiate processes for judicial accountability,” the Catholic Bishops emphasize that such actions “must be exercised with professionalism, impartiality, and an unyielding regard for national peace and cohesion.”
They explain that a Chief Justice, by virtue of their “indispensable role in constitutional order”, must be shielded from political interference. The Bishops warn that justice is endangered once it is rendered “conditional or revocable.”






