Stabroek News

Election results expected today -CEO

-polling statements point to straight fight between APNU+AFC, PPP/C

-

Following a day of high emotion and smooth voting, Guyanese are anxiously awaiting the results of the 2020 General and Regional Elections (GRE) and based on a small number of polling statements collected by this newspaper it was a straight fight between the incumbent APNU+AFC and the opposition PPP/C with a smattering of votes for some of the new parties. (See pages

12 and 13)

While Chief Election Officer, Keith Lowenfield would not provide a definitive date for the declaratio­n of results, he told a press conference last evening that he is hoping that the ten Returning Officers (RO) will be able to make a declaratio­n of the results in their respective districts by lunch time today.

A total of 660,998 registered electors were expected to cast their ballots at 2339 polling stations in what analyst have said is Guyana’s most important elections ever.

The day itself began with a promise to be perhaps the efficient and peaceful election this country has ever seen but by close of polls hostilitie­s had erupted at areas in Regions 3 and 4 with riot police being called in to quell unrest at Mon Repos on the East Coast of Demerara.

In Region 3 tensions simmered over claims that persons were distributi­ng fake Identifica­tion Cards with coalition supporters blocking the roads and turning away the PPP/C presidenti­al candidate

Irfaan Ali.

“They are in full panic…it is a desperate attempt…to mobilise their supporters,” General Secretary of the People’s Progressiv­e Party/Civic, Bharrat Jagdeo said of the incumbent while blaming them for the unrest.

According to Jagdeo, once the coalition saw a strong turnout in PPP stronghold­s and low turnouts in many areas in Georgetown, it began reacting in a predictabl­e manner by making wild accusation­s.

“Why would we want to distribute ID cards openly to people on Election Day in front of the entire media and everyone else?” he asked while stressing that a fake ID card would be impossible to use given GECOM’s checks and balances.

The incumbent APNU+AFC in turn accused Jagdeo of making a false and mischievou­s statement.

According to a statement from the party it was expected that “the PPP would engage in this type of fake news and fearmonger­ing to set the stage for excuses for their certain political defeat.”

President David Granger in a closing statement applauded GECOM for conducting efficient polls.

According to the President his observatio­n during the process was that voting proceeded in a peaceful manner during most of the day.

“We received no reports of any interferen­ce in the normal electoral process

except for some incidents were have reported to GECOM,” he said before explaining that one such incident was preventing persons from voting because they were wearing colours associated with political parties.

As the two major parties traded barbs via statement their supporters faced off on a narrow village street with a line of riot police separating them.

Bristled

The entire atmosphere bristled with malevolent tension distinctly different from the exuberant joy which marked the beginning of the day.

For many communitie­s E-Day began before the sun rose as scores of their neighbours used drums, bells and horns to let them know it was time to Get Up and Vote.

In Buxton, the village criers took to the streets at 3:30 AM, a full two and a half hours before polls opened at 6 am.

“Wake up. Wake Up. Buxton people y’all wake up,” they chanted as they moved from street to street. Those who heeded their call found themselves at their place of poll as early as 4:30 am.

“When we arrived to set up the entire street was filled with people. The line extended its entire length,” one Presiding Officer at the Buxton Practical Instructio­n Centre (PIC) told Stabroek News.

At Company Road Primary, also in Buxton, a similar line had formed. At 6 am when the doors of the polling stations opened it began to rain in the village but this did not deter those already in line.

“It’s just a lil blessings…bare up and push through,” one villager advised.

They did and by lunchtime more than half of the 927 electors registered to vote at the two polling stations in the compound had cast a ballot.

At the PIC the percentage was a lot closer to 80% according to one Presiding Officer.

Everyone was in good spirits. Inked fingers decorated Facebook timelines like badges of honour and no inconvenie­nce was too great to overcome.

In the vicinity of the Annandale Secondary School, this newspaper interacted with one of the informatio­n booths which had been set up by the PPP/C to assist persons in finding their polling station and was told of those who had to travel great distances to cast a ballot.

One woman who had transferre­d her registrati­on to Buxton was somehow still registered at the St Mary’s Primary School at Soesdyke, East Bank Demerara. Another man had to travel all the way from Linden to cast his vote in Buxton even though his change of address had been approved by the commission.

After verifying these claims, Stabroek News reached out to GECOM PRO Yolanda Ward who explained that the commission was prepared to transport the affected persons.

‘I’m not sure what happened there but I saw one other case and we have transporte­d that individual,” she noted adding that it is unlikely this situation affected a significan­t number of persons since the commission has only received the one complaint.

Lowenfield later said it was a handful clarifying that 25 as a subset of the 600,000 registered would constitute a handful.

He too noted that those persons were transporte­d to their place of poll once they identified the issue to GECOM staff.

Meanwhile the persons travelling long distance to vote appeared unconcerne­d about the inconvenie­nce.

At Mon Repos similar inconvenie­nces were brushed off. One voter told Stabroek News of being directed to the wrong polling station and standing in the sun for nearly an hour with his young child only to have to join the correct line, this time at the Mon Repos Market Tarmac.

“We’re all human. We make mistakes,” he said of the hapless clerk who misdirecte­d him.

Further up the coast one eager young beaver was disappoint­ed when he learned that his January 5 birthday made him five days too young to vote.

A new feature of this year’s elections was Tents which the commission decided to use in lieu of private residences.

Along the East Coast corridor playfields and vacant lots became polling places with either individual tents as polling stations.

The unconventi­onal set up seemed not to impact the efficiency of the process or make voters uncomforta­ble in anyway.

 ??  ?? One of the Tents erected for voting at the Paradise Playfield on the East Coast of Demerara
One of the Tents erected for voting at the Paradise Playfield on the East Coast of Demerara
 ??  ?? An informatio­n centre establishe­d by the People’s Progressiv­e Party at Enterprise. Each of the villages considered a traditiona­l strong hold of the opposition party was equipped with such a centre to assist voters
An informatio­n centre establishe­d by the People’s Progressiv­e Party at Enterprise. Each of the villages considered a traditiona­l strong hold of the opposition party was equipped with such a centre to assist voters

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