Parliament has deferred the ruling on Dome Kwabenya MP Sarah Adwoa Safo, over absenteeism, to a later date.
The Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, was expected to decide whether or not the embattled MP should be maintained after missing 15 parliamentary sittings.
The Majority MPs have urged the speaker to declare the Dome Kwabenya seat vacant, while the Minority jumped to the defence of the absent MP, saying she still needed to be given a chance to explain herself.
After hearing constructive criticisms from both sides of the house, the speaker said he needed time to prepare a detailed submission since this would set a precedent for cases related to future absentees.
“I have consulted the old lady, the old lady has given me some advice, and I think that advice is correct. I need time to submit to this house a reasoned written ruling.
“I cannot, in the haste of today, give you a ruling. In the circumstances, I will urge this house to call it a day. On return, I will deliver a written ruling,” he said to a divided house.
Background
The issue of absenteeism came to light after a former Member of Parliament for Kumbungu, Ras Mubarak, petitioned the Speaker in March 2022.
Mr. Mubarak cited four MPs: Dome Kwabenya MP, Sarah Adwoa Safo; Ayawaso Central MP, Henry Quartey; MP for Ahanta West, Ebenezer Kojo Kum; and Assin Central MP, Ken Ohene Agyapong.
He said the MPs had flouted provisions of Article 97 (1) (c) of the Constitution and Parliament’s Standing Order 16 (1), which frowns on members absenting themselves for 15 sitting days without permission from the speaker.
Per Article 97(1)(c) of the 1992 Constitution, a Member of Parliament shall vacate his seat “if he is absent, without the permission in writing of the Speaker, and he is unable to offer a reasonable explanation to the Parliamentary Committee on Privileges from fifteen sittings of a meeting of Parliament during any period that Parliament has been summoned to meet and continues to meet.”
Speaker of Parliament Alban Bagbin subsequently referred the three MPs to the Privileges Committee.
Adwoa Safo’s reasons for absence
In an earlier interview, the sector minister said she was not served to appear for a probe on absenteeism.
The legislator, who has been criticized for abandoning her ministry and parliamentary duties, says no information has officially reached her desk.
“I have served in parliament for over 12 years and a practising lawyer for 18 years. I know the rules, but as I sit here, I have not been served…No official document has come to me.
“I don’t have to be served through the media. I have to be served personally, and I don’t have to be served through third parties,” she said.
The Gender Minister said she was currently in the United States attending to pressing family issues and would return after taking care of her sick son.
“As you can see, I am here in the United States taking care of my son, and I don’t know how I am supposed to appear before the committee. If the speaker says you have been summoned to the Privileges Committee, the committee then sets its own modalities on when we are to appear, but I don’t have any information on that,” she said in an interview on Joy News on Thursday, 26 May 2022.
She insisted she would only return home when her son was declared fit and healthy.
Committee’s Report
On 13 July 2022, Parliament’s Privileges Committee, after completing its probe, decided to let the entire house determine the fate of Ms Safo.
The committee took the decision after the legislator, on three different occasions, failed to honour a zoom invitation from the committee to explain her absence from parliament.
In the case of the other absentees, the committee, by a 15-12 majority decision, determined that the excuse from Assin Central MP Kennedy Agyapong and Ayawaso Central MP Henry Quartey is tenable and, thus, they should not lose their seats.
“With Kennedy Agyapong, there were 15 votes against 12, likewise Henry Quartey. In Adwoa Safo’s case, the chair of the committee said since she had never appeared before us, we did not vote. We have thus decided to hand her over to parliament to determine her fate,” a member of the committee and MP for Akwatia, Henry Boakye-Yiadom, revealed.
Below is the full report submitted by the Committee