| Electoral commisioner Charlotte Osei |
The NPP's push for a new voter register is all in vain as the EC has decided to keep the names of alledged togo nationals in the register. The push was to remove over 76000 names from the register.
The EC says it would be “an
arbitrary and discriminatory application of the law”, if the NPP's request is
granted
The EC says, “in examining the
identity and status of the 76,000 Togolese alleged to be on Ghana’s Register,
the EC found that they were all duly registered during the mass registration
period in 2012.”
The opposition party has been
courting the support of other political parties and civil societies for a new
register ahead of elections later this year.
The party says the current electoral
roll lacks credibility, citing a deliberate inclusion of aliens in the
register.
The removal of the alleged 76,000
alleged foreign nationals was a key point in the NPP’s push for a new voters’
register.
The EC holds that the NPP did not
provide any proof of the citizenship status of the alleged foreign nationals
and did not show any proof that they were not entitled to be registered in
Ghana.
The EC responded to NPP in a 33- page written document
the response read--
“From the document presented by the
NPP, the commission was unable to confirm the authenticity of the Togolese
Register used by the NPP in their analysis as the Electoral Commission of Togo
declined to provide the EC with a copy of its register or confirm the authenticity
of the soft copy of the register used by the NPP.
“Seeking to remove names of persons
who appear on the registers of Togo, Burkina Faso and Cote d’Ivoire in the EC’s
view, would be an arbitrary and discriminatory application of the law. The EC
asks, would the Commission therefore be required to obtain the registers of all
countries of the world and remove the names of persons who appear on such
registers as well as Ghana’s?” the EC quizzed.
The opposition party also raised a
Supreme Court ruling on the use of National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA)
cards for registration and called for the removal of persons who have been
registered with the card from the register.
However, the EC says the party is
misinterpreting the Supreme Court ruling.
According to the EC, in the Abu
Ramadan case, the Supreme Court ruled that the use of NHIA cards, in their
current form, was insufficient as proof of citizenship and consequently.
The EC says it was directed to stop
accepting that as proof of citizenship for voter registration exercises.
“Nowhere in the ruling did the
Supreme court nullify all registrations by voters who presented NHIA cards as
proof of Citizenship,” the EC says.
On NPP's claims that there were
edited pictures on the current electoral register, the EC holds that claim is
unfounded.
According to EC, the Biometric
Register has multiple layers of data protection and integrity assurance and
does not permit the possibility of pictures on the register being edited.
“The consultant’s report on the
Independent Review of the Biometric Voters Register also supports the position
that this is not possible and that the system has adequate integrity and has
not been compromised. We would be happy to share the consultant’s report with
the NPP,” the elections ombudsman said.
source: myjoyonline
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