The ECOWAS Court of Justice (CCJ) has elected Cape Verde’s Justice Ricardo Gonçalves as its new President.
It also elected Sierra Leone’s Justice Sengu Koroma as new Vice President, both for non-renewable four-year tenure.
They were elected by the court’s college of five judges, and subsequently inaugurated by Guinea-Bissau’s President Umaro Embalo.
Embalo is the former Chairman of ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government.
Gonçalves succeeds Justice Edward Asante, who had presided as the court’s president for six years, while Koroma succeeds Ivory Coast’s Gberi-bè Ouattara as Vice President.
Meanwhile, Justice Asante has been recommended for Ghana’s Supreme Court, although he still remains a judge of the CCJ until the end of his extended tenure in 2026.
NAN reports that under Asante, the CCJ witnessed remarkable growth and transformation in its jurisprudence, case management system and physical infrastructure.
Asante made possible the relocation of the Court from its former overcrowded location to its new complex at Gudu District, Abuja in 2023.
The legal luminary also brought innovations in the CCJ’s processes through the introduction of the electronic case management system and the consequential amendment of the Court’s practice direction.
The innovations have enabled seamless virtual and physical court sessions, as well as easing access to the court by case applicants from ECOWAS member states.
This has reduced the financial burden on applicants because applications can now be filed, cases heard and judgments delivered virtually.
He also filled most of the vacancies in the Court’s organogram with the recruitment of experienced lawyers into the Registry and Research Departments.
ECOWAS Court gets new leadership, as Asante bows out