The Electoral Commission (EC) is in the process of increasing polling
stations across the country, to help reduce long queues that occur at
various polling stations during voting periods, Dr Kwadwo Afari-Gyan,
Chairman of the Commission has announced.
Dr Afari-Gyan was responding to a comment by a participant at the
dialogue series organized by the National Commission on Civic
Education’s (NCCE) in Accra, as to what the EC was doing about the long
queues that occur at polling stations.
He said EC had taken notice of such long queues that sometimes delay
the process, and has mapped out operational mechanism to address it,
which includes increasing the number of polling stations.
Commenting on the aftermath of the election petition, Dr Afari-Gyan
said, results of elections in the country will continue to be very
close, and as such the same issues of irregularities will be causes of
concern, so the need to address such problems together with all
stakeholders, including IPAC members, as well as voters.
He said he was happy that the Supreme Court judges in dealing with the
election petition recognized the role of the voter as an important
element of the election, and therefore interpreted the issues within
their context.
“The right to vote and to have your vote counted is very important and
so if a presiding officer refuses to sign a pink sheet which is an
administrative issue, the voter should not be made to suffer after
having gone through pain to vote, rather the presiding officer should be
made to face the consequences,” Dr Afari-Gyan noted.
On the issue of over voting, he said it was proper that the New
Patriotic Party’s (NPP’s) call for interpretation of over-voting was
seriously considered by the Inter-Party Advisory Committee (IPAC),
whereas the issue of voting without verification could easily be
resolved through the use of technology and other human factors.
He explained that even before a voter’s name appeared in the voters
register; he or she would have undergone “a certain form of
verification” which could help authenticate the eligibility of a voter.
“The ultimate verification is the facial verification”.
EC alone cannot resolve the issues of elections and that each participant must be vigilant, he noted.
The EC Chairman said since all the recommendations from the court
bordered on pink sheet, the Commission would sit with political parties
to look at the practicalities of the issues and resolve them.
Mrs Charlotte Osei, Chairperson of NCCE, said it was important that
IPAC met to decide on the issue of over-voting within the Ghanaian
context.
She also indicated that the Dialogue would be held quarterly to educate
Ghanaians on various national issues that would “help strengthen our
democracy.”
Present at the Dialogue were representatives of the various political
parties, state institutions, civil society groups and other
professionals.
Some participants at the Dialogue called on the EC to liaise with
Ghanaians who have the technology know-how to help involve technology as
a critical component of the election processes.
Others called on IPAC to review the “no verification no vote policy,”
adopted during the last elections, so as not to disenfranchise eligible
voters should a machine fail to identify a voter.
The NCCE Dialogue series have been introduced this year on the theme
“Engage, Educate, Empower, ” to discuss national issues that will
empower the citizenry to participate in the processes that will sustain
Ghana’s democracy.
The topic discussed under the first in the series of the quarterly
event was: “Beyond the August 29 Verdict: Lessons and Path Ahead”.
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SOURCE;GHANAWEB
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