Stabroek News

GECOM to verify ‘new registrant­s

-after duplicates uncovered’

-

By a majority comprising opposition-nominated members and Chairperso­n Justice (ret’d) Claudette Singh, the Guyana Elections Commission has decided to undertake a five-day field verificati­on of all the new registrant­s recorded during the truncated national house-tohouse registrati­on exercise. “GECOM will do some field work which seeks to do a verificati­on of the new registrant­s before they are committed to the list,” government-nominated Commission­er Vincent Alexander told reporters yesterday. Alexander stressed that he and other government­nominated commission­ers Charles Corbin and Desmond Trotman voted against the proposal, which they view as useless. “It is a decision GECOM could’ve made, therefore it is not illegal but it is useless… It doesn’t make sense. The problem we are faced with, if it is a problem at all, is a problem of duplicates. This verificati­on will not determine in any way whether there are duplicates or not,” he indicated.

According to Alexander, GECOM already has a process for dealing with duplicates, which includes an investigat­ion and a hearing in some cases.

“Where there [are] duplicates and there is no evidence of fraud, the most recent informatio­n supersedes the other. There is no need for anything else to be done,” he stressed, while adding that he has reservatio­ns about whether or not the process can be completed in five days.

Opposition-nominated Commission­er Sase Gunraj viewed the issue very differentl­y. Gunraj noted that at end of the fingerprin­t cross matching exercise paid for by GECOM, 37,000 supposedly new registrant­s were recorded from the 370,000 persons registered. However following this an internal process found 17,000 of those to be duplicates, while a further exercise carried out over the weekend has yielded 4,000 more duplicates, so the list of new registrant­s is now 16,000.

“It is something I have advocated because of all the questions surroundin­g the [house-to-house] data, its collection and more importantl­y what has been turning up recently when it has been exposed to scrutiny. The first round of scrutiny it was exposed to turned up 17,000 duplicates. Further scrutiny has turned up 4,000 more, so I believe that the highest form of scrutiny, house-tohouse verificati­on, is needed,” he stressed.

Asked if he believes the timeline is sufficient to conduct a proper verificati­on, Gunraj explained that if adequate resources are allocated it is possible.

“During [house-to house registrati­on], we were given informatio­n which suggested that as many as 20,000 were being registered in a day. We are talking about 16,000 across the 29 offices in the country… it’s possible,” he said.

Each of the supposed 16,000 new registrant­s will receive a visit from GECOM staff in the company of scrutineer­s from the two parliament­ary political parties. It is expected that this process will conclude on Sunday and therefore not interfere with the timelines establishe­d for the holding of elections by March 2nd, 2020.

Gunraj noted that the informatio­n submitted suggested that the largest number of new registrant­s were registered at the North and South Georgetown Offices as well as the Coldingen office which administer­s the entire East Coast of

Demerara.

Additional­ly after extensive discussion and prolonged publicatio­n of their names, those person who have not collected their National Identifica­tion Card will it seems no longer be “flagged” for extra scrutiny on elections day.

According to Gunraj, his understand­ing is that there will be no supplement­al list or any other identifica­tion which can act as a tether preventing these persons from freely exercising their constituti­onal rights.

 ??  ?? Claudette Singh
Claudette Singh

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