Divine Healer’s Church General Overseer sued over alleged refusal to retire
Six pastors of the Divine Healer’s Church have dragged the general overseer and four other principal officers of the church to the Accra High Court over their alleged refusal to retire.
The five are the General Overseer, Apostle Isaac Kwabena Adade; the Deputy General Overseer, Apostle Maxwell Aryeetey Foster; the General Secretary, Apostle Kenneth Ashaley Addo; the Chairman of the National Youth Ministry, Apostle Emmanuel Acquaye, and the National Women’s Fellowship Leader, Apostle Dora Edith Osekre.
The plaintiffs have accused the five principal officers of refusing to retire in spite of reaching the required retirement age of 65 as stipulated by the constitution of the church.
It is also the case of the plaintiffs that the five principal officers are ineligible to stay in office after serving two five-year terms, the limit accepted by the constitution of the church.
According to the plaintiffs, the general overseer of the church claimed that the Holy Spirit had revealed to him that he and his team should remain in office, hence the refusal of the five principal officers to retire.
The six plaintiffs are led by the Chairman of the Pastoral Council of the church and the Tema A2 Regional Head of the church, Apostle Daniel Mensah Attakpah.
Statement of claim
It is the contention of the six pastors that the continuous stay in office of the five principal officers of the church is against the constitution of the church and ,therefore, unconstitutional.
“In spite of having attained the age limit of 65 in 2011 and having remained in office unconstitutionally for a second term as general overseer and member of the National Executive Council which ended in 2016, second defendant continued to stay in office unconstitutionally and indefinitely without proper procedure for his replacement.
“With reference to the third, fourth and sixth defendants, each of them has, just as the second defendant, remained in office unconstitutionally in their respective positions beyond their tenures of office which ended in 2016,” the plaintiffs stated in their statement of claim.
Alleged amendment
The plaintiffs also contend that the general overseer and the other principal officers, without consultation with the church members of the church, had hired a lawyer to amend the constitution to remove the age and term limits.
“The plaintiffs say further that members of the church have been helpless in the circumstances and since the defendants will not stop their unconstitutional stay in office and organise elections for appointment of persons to replace them in their respective positions in the church, some of the membership have left in protestation,” the statement of claim added.
Reliefs
The plaintiffs are, therefore, seeking a declaration from the court that the continuous stay in office of the five principal officers is unconstitutional.
They are also seeking an order directed at the church to organise fresh elections for the election of qualified members of the church to replace the five defendants.
Among other reliefs, the plaintiffs also want the court to order the defendants to render audited accounts to the church and new executives who would be elected to replace them.
Writer’s email: emma.hawkson@graphic.com.gh