The Accra High Court has granted a motion for an interlocutory injunction against the National Service Personnel Association (NASPA) elections, following a legal action filed by two service personnel from different regions.
The plaintiffs, Carlos Anokye from Gomoa Abonyi in the Central Region and Bright Korsina Asare from Tapa Abotoase in the Oti Region, seek to restrain the defendants, alleged elected national officers of NASPA, from holding themselves out as national executives until the final determination of the case.
The injunction application, filed through their counsel, Eunice Darkoh, Esq. of Appiade Chambers in Accra, argues that the defendants and their agents should be barred from performing any duties or representing themselves as NASPA executives pending the outcome of the substantive suit.
This motion, filed on October 30, 2025, is scheduled to be heard on Wednesday, November 12, 2025, at 9 a.m. before the High Court in Accra.
The case has been recorded under suit number GJ/0111/2026 and names Andy Amuaku, Nana Adu-Gyamfi Mensah, Abdul Wahab Bala Mohammed, Martin Suguruma Jotang Konlan, Jesse Wisdom Asafo, Khalid Abdul-Hamid, Amina Ali Gausu, Emmanuel Reagan Fynn, and Arafat Ibrahim Mbillah as defendants.
The injunction arises amid growing controversy surrounding the conduct of the NASPA elections, which have already faced allegations of irregularities and misconduct.
The court’s intervention is expected to temporarily halt all activities of the purported national executives until a final ruling is made.






Contributor: Samuel Eshun
































































