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Justice Emile Short describes Daddy Lumba as “naughty”

Emile also disclosed that Highlife legends like Gyedu Blay Ambulley and Kojo Antwi rate high on his playlist and will enjoy listening to them always.

Emile Francis Short

Ghanaian judge and the first Commissioner on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) in Ghana Emile Francis Short says he enjoys listening to the songs of Highlife singer Daddy Lumba.

Emile, in an interview with 'Starr Chat' host Bola Ray on Accra based Starr FM described the “Nea Wo Ho Beto Wo” hitmaker as “naughty”, adding that Lumba’s genre of music is soothing to the ears.

Emile also disclosed that Highlife legends like Gyedu Blay Ambulley and Kojo Antwi rate high on his playlist and will enjoy listening to them always.

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The respected Ghanaian judge, who was the first commissioner of the anti-graft body, also noted he enjoys jazz, especially Peter White’s “Chasing the Dawn.”

Justice Short has been a lecturer at the University of Cape Coast in the Central region of Ghana and once lectured at the Middlesex Polytechnic in London, United Kingdom. He has also been a consultant for the United Nations Development Programme UNDP, the Commonwealth Secretariat in London, and the Carter Center in the United States.

He was appointed the Commissioner for Human Rights and Administrative Justice in Ghana at the beginning of the Fourth Republic in 1993 by President Jerry Rawlings.

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