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In England and Wales the right to 
silence can be found in the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984. The 
right to silence has undergone a couple of amendments since the Act was 
passed as the English and the Welsh struggled to balance the right of 
the Criminal not to incriminate himself against a high risk of giving 
the criminal an unfettered opportunity to fabricate his Defence.
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 The
 right is pertinent to criminal proceedings although, there are serious 
lessons that can be drawn from it in relation to the on-going election 
dispute in Ghana in respect of the conduct of Dr Afari Gyan. Currently 
the right is as follows: ‘You do not have to say anything. But it may 
harm your defence if you do not mention when questioned, something you 
later on rely in Court. Anything you do say may be given in evidence in 
Court.
 
 By way of explanation, you have the right to remain silent
 at all times. But if you fail to mention any facts that you later rely 
on in court the prosecution can use that against you. It may be inferred
 that your failure to mention very relevant facts then when questioned, 
which you later jump into the Witness Box to testify to, is likely to 
contain recent fabrications. This adverse inference is even stronger if 
at the time you were originally questioned, you had Legal Advice and/or 
representation.
 
 The Chairman of the Electoral Commission did not
 file any affidavit in response to that of the Petitioners and indeed it
 was not until he appeared to be chastised by one of the Supreme Court 
Judges, that he began attending court proceedings.
 
 Even then his 
initial response to accusations about his non-attendance and failure to 
file an affidavit was quite arrogant and insulting to even the Bench. 
The first gentleman of Ghana’s elections purported to be angry about not
 being told that he was ‘on air’ but ironically it was even after 
becoming aware of being ‘on air’ that he began furiously to hurl insult 
and abuse at his host. A man whose role and decisions in the Country 
require him to conduct himself with considerable decorum in public as 
his decisions can upset the peace and stability in the motherland, used 
words like ‘crazy’ and ‘stupid’ in the full knowledge that he was ‘on 
air’.
 
 In my opinion, there was something more sinister that the 
Chairman may have been hiding from. His anger was not without 
motivation. He cannot purport to have been so surprised that he was on 
air. How can an important figure such as that feign ignorance about the 
possibility of being recorded in one form or the other whether on air or
 not; he was contacted by a stranger who does not even disguise his 
identity? How could he have been so shocked as to misconduct himself in 
the way he did? What was he frightened of?
 
 Overall, the 
impression I gather as an objective bystander about the way Dr Afari 
Gyan has kept his silence without a word of written testimony until the 
morning of his oral testimony, is that he was probably avoiding the 
possibility that, he would have had to testify or depose to some 
falsehoods, which if discovered, would have led to more serious personal
 consequences for him, to wit, possible fraud and/or perjury. He 
listened to the Petitioners’ Witness and that of the 2nd and 3rd 
Respondents before comfortably offering to testify? Imponderable and 
Ludicrous!! In my opinion something more serious happened in the course 
of the December 2012 elections.
 
 It is more serious than the 
grounds openly relied on by the Petitioners in these proceedings. No one
 has referred to it yet and with the help of his Lawyers, Afari Gyan now
 knows that it will never arise, hence his confidence.
 
 Admittedly,
 when Dr Afari Gyan began to attend the proceedings, he did so 
consistently. He attended regularly and seemed extremely attentive. 
Curiously the EC does not appear to have disclosed the likelihood that 
Dr Afari Gyan was to testify in the Witness Box. In point of fact, this 
was what all the Respondents, including the Commission, initially 
intended to do all along, hence their application/motion for extension 
of time within which to file their affidavits. That is, they wanted to 
be permitted to hear all of the Petitioner’s case before adducing any 
written testimonies in the first place. That sort of advantage is 
unheard off.
 
 
 To add insult to injury, contrary to well 
established rules, Dr Afari Gyan has even been allowed to testify 
completely outside the contents of the Commission’s own written 
testimony/ies; this was in spite of Phillip Addison’s protestations.
 
 Dr Bawumia was not given any breather as regards straying from his written testimony.
 
 I
 must say that when Phillip Addisson of Counsel challenged Dr Afari Gyan
 from testifying, my gut instinct was for the Bench to reject his 
objection. This is because, it would appear that everyone wanted to hear
 from the horse’s own mouth, the Master of all elections since 1993! 
Even Phillip Addison’s opposition was not that spirited. However in 
hindsight the Master of Elections has been shown favour and has been 
granted what can at best be described as the right to Silence.
 
 
 This
 is however clearly not fair. In Civil Litigation all parties are 
supposed to show their hand before the game commences. The Bench is also
 obliged to be consistent and fair and not to permit any party to appear
 to be given unfair advantage.
 
 Whilst Afari Gyan’s apparent 
lectures were fairly innocuous to the Petitioner’s case, he is using the
 opportunity to demonstrate his competence and sincerity, both of which 
could affect the court’s assessment of his credibility. His lectures are
 neither contained in his Deputy’s written testimony nor in his 
non-existent testimony. However, judging from the obvious discrepancies 
on the face of the documentary evidence in this case Afari Gyan cannot 
honestly contend that the elections were conducted competently.
 
 Even
 putting the best construction on the evidence thus far, the Chair 
cannot pretend to be both competent and sincere if the elections he 
presided over had more than half of the relevant Pink Sheets 
‘mistakenly’ completed. Furthermore, given the size of the error/s, if 
indeed they were mere errors, why did he not have a procedure for 
checking these pink sheets for some consistency as a competent 
administrator? Especially, in light of the fact that a substantial 
number of his staff as he claims, were new recruits.
 
 In the words
 of Dr Afari Gyan himself, he found it important to emphasize to his 
staff about the importance of completing forms correctly as it could 
lead to the declaration of the wrong person as President.
 
 What 
has Dr Afari Gyan been waiting for all this time? Was he waiting to 
construct his story? Was the learned Doctor dreading the possibility of 
being confronted with evidence more probative of ill-motivated wrong 
doing? He could not have been waiting for his confidence to build up? 
Afari Gyan simply had something to hide and his testimony now, which he 
has had opportunity to depose to earlier, should be taken with a pinch 
of salt as the English have learnt through experience to do with their 
criminal witnesses.
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| Source: Kwame Ohene Asare Principal Solicitor, Braidwood Law Practice Sols Croydon, Surrey, U.K. |  | 
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