Stabroek News

Private sector calls on GECOM to suspend house to house

-in letter to Lowenfield

-

Contending that the ongoing house-to-house registrati­on exercise is “unlawful,” the Private Sector Commission (PSC) has called for the process to be immediatel­y suspended.

“We have sought legal advice on this matter and it is our understand­ing that you have not been legally directed by the [Guyana Elections Commission] to proceed as you are doing and that to conduct houseto-house registrati­on is unlawful,” Chairman of the PSC Gerry Gouveia wrote in a letter to Chief Election Officer Keith Lowenfield yesterday.

“The Private Sector Commission calls upon GECOM to immediatel­y suspend the house-tohouse registrati­on exercise until a Chairperso­n of GECOM has been named and can inclusivel­y and respectful­ly decide the best way forward,” Gouveia said in the letter which was also made available to the news media.

GECOM on Friday officially announced that house-to-house registrati­on would begin on Saturday and the exercise is now underway with thousands of enumerator­s deployed on the streets from that day. The exercise has divided the nation with the PNCR and the WPA, both members of the APNU faction of the governing coalition, welcoming the exercise while the opposition PPP has deemed it unlawful and newcomer ANUG labelling it illegal. Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo has further directed his party’s supporters to not participat­e and says the PPP will today seek an injunction to stop the exercise.

In the letter to Lowenfield, Gouveia said that the PSC has also noted that GECOM’s Internal Counsel has advised that GECOM would be in contempt of the ruling of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) to carry out any instructio­n in this regard from former Chairman, James Patterson, whose appointmen­t by the President has been ruled to be flawed.

Stabroek News had previously reported that GECOM’s in-house lawyer, Excellence Dazzell, had submitted an opinion to Lowenfield that argued that the commission is bound by the CCJ judgment, which reiterated that the December 21st, 2018 motion of no-confidence against the government was properly passed by the National Assembly and that the clear provisions of Article 106 of the Constituti­on which includes the holding of elections, immediatel­y became engaged.

“You must also be aware that you are also taking this approach when there is a clear constituti­onal requiremen­t to hold elections within three months of the validation of the no-confidence motion. The effect of GECOM’s action on electoral democracy and broader democratic governance cannot be lost on you,” Gouveia wrote.

He recalled that the PSC has been an accredited elections observer since 2001 and has participat­ed in consultati­ons involving civil society, political parties and the internatio­nal community in 2008 to undertake house-to-house registrati­on for the establishm­ent of the current National Register of Registrant­s Database (NRRD). According to Gouveia, the decision to conduct house-to-house registrati­on was inclusive and respectful of all national actors and the subsequent exercise involved full involvemen­t of political parties’ scrutineer­s in house-to-house visits.

Total absence

Gouveia said that in this instance, there has been a total absence of consultati­on with the political parties’ scrutineer­s and, therefore, political parties scrutiny of the registrati­on exercise, which is essential to establishi­ng a credible NRRD.

“We cannot have a credible database if these elements are completely absent from the current house-to-house exercise you are embarking on,” he said.

“GECOM’s present conduct is a complete break from its history of inclusivit­y and respectful engagement with all the relevant stakeholde­rs. GECOM is failing to meet its duty to communicat­e, provide facts and justify its actions to the public. You must be aware that undertakin­g house-to-house registrati­on without proper consultati­on and ventilatio­n of the alternativ­e approaches with stakeholde­rs undermines your credibilit­y and trustworth­iness as an elections agency and your credibilit­y and trustworth­iness as Chief Election Officer,” Gouveia charged.

“Quite apart from the fact that…you are proceeding to conduct this registrati­on unilateral­ly, unlawfully and in contempt of the fact that GECOM is without a Chairman and is not meeting as a Commission, we know that GECOM has not conducted a field test of the existing NRRD,” Gouveia said.

“GECOM is not, therefore, in a position to state with credibilit­y that some 200,000 entries on the NRRD do not belong there. This advice to the President begs the question not only of why would anyone tell the President that, but also why would a register under your custody since the 2015 elections, one that gave us a credible election in 2015 and has gone through cycles of continuous registrati­on, have suddenly become so corrupted,” he wrote.

The PSC chairman recalled Lowenfield’s statement in 2015 in response to a query about the size of the voters’ list which was 570,787 at the time - that GECOM had opened more registrati­on centres and was more efficient at registerin­g persons, many of whom were also able to get birth certificat­es and requisite documents to register. According to Gouveia, GECOM, at that time, admitted to a lag in removing deceased persons and those who migrated permanentl­y but they were assured that the procedures for voting made it practicall­y impossible for anyone to double vote or vote as an imposter.

“You confirmed that GECOM staff and parties’ scrutineer­s are given folios at every polling station with particular­s of voters registered at that station, including photograph­s. Thus, while it was ideal to keep the register scrubbed, you were not concerned then that the size of the list would undermine a free and fair election,” Gouveia said.

He added that the 2015 election with a voters’ list of 570,787 electors and 412,012 valid votes cast resulted in credible national and regional elections. In 2018, the voters list of 573,923 that was generated from the continuous­ly updated NRRD also resulted in a credible local government election, he said.

“You nor anyone else expressed concerns about a bloated list and credibilit­y of an election on the basis of the list size relative to our population as recorded in the 2012 national census,” Gouveia wrote.

Extreme of options

“We have had two voters’ list above 500,000 that

gave us two credible elections. Now you are attempting to reason that a list of similar size cannot give us a credible election and that the only remedy is the most extreme of options – house-to-house registrati­on to create a brand new NRRD. You have ignored the fact that the existing NRRD has been continuous­ly maintained and has not expired. You have, instead, inexplicab­ly, discounted the reasonable statutory option of Claims and Objections for an election to bring the register up to date for constituti­onally due elections,” Gouveia charged.

He also highlighte­d the policy decision taken for cycles of continuous registrati­on, which include claims and objections periods would be undertaken to update and maintain the database so that it would be in a condition to produce a voters’ list whenever necessary. He said that evidence will show that GECOM took the policy decision for cycles of registrati­on specifical­ly because it wanted to be in a position to hold elections at any time. According to the PSC chairman, GECOM has been continuous­ly refreshing the NRRD, which does not expire and in 2018, the tenth continuous registrati­on and claims and objections period prior to the local government elections that year, was done.

“You have not profession­ally justified this attempt at this extreme and dangerous action you have taken. The exclusive and non-transparen­t way you are going about it will not produce a credible NRRD. In fact, experience shows that such an exercise would take far more than the three months you have scheduled to properly include registrant­s,” Gouveia said.

He recalled that in 2008, the process took one year, with six months of registrati­on followed by finger print crosscheck­s etc, before ID cards could be issued. He also contended that the school holidays and the wet season will present challenges.

“Undertakin­g a complete revamp of the NRRD in such a relatively short span of time before an election will more than likely disenfranc­hise voters, particular­ly domestic migrant workers, persons abroad for medical, school and other reasons. Evidence and experience indicate that you are not going to be able to create a credible voters’ list within a year by scrapping the existing NRRD and creating a new one,” Gouveia declared.

Observing that the laws were amended in 2005 to introduce a continuous cyclical registrati­on process using the database created in the 2001 house-to-house registrati­on as the base, Gouveia said house-tohouse registrati­on is the very antithesis of continuous registrati­on.

“They cannot coexist. To break the cycle and discard the database is therefore clearly illegal. Names can only be removed from the National Register in accordance with the Act, for example by death, insanity etc,” he said. The businessma­n said that in 2008 when it was decided to conduct another house-to-house registrati­on after the 2005 Amendment, the law was amended in 2007 to permit that exercise. “It could not have been lawfully done without that amendment,” he argued.

Against that backdrop, Gouveia said that the PSC calls upon GECOM to immediatel­y suspend the house-to-house registrati­on exercise until a Chairperso­n of GECOM has been named and can inclusivel­y and respectful­ly decide the best way forward.

“It is the responsibi­lity of GECOM and the government to canvass the positions of all the political parties for a decision that is in the best interest of the country. The ruling of the Caribbean Court of Justice must be respected,” he said.

He called on Lowenfield to discharge his duty “profession­ally and objectivel­y and provide informatio­n to the public to correct misinforma­tion about the voters list and voting process.”

Guyana’s commitment to democratic principles, respect for the rule of law and free and fair elections must rest on a truly independen­t electoral agency, Gouveia wrote. “GECOM’s conduct at this moment in our history will be consequent­ially long into our future. Every employee of GECOM must withstand public scrutiny regarding their impartiali­ty. We trust you understand that this is being closely monitored in the public interest,” he ended.

 ??  ?? Keith Lowenfield
Keith Lowenfield
 ??  ?? Gerry Gouveia
Gerry Gouveia

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