Stabroek News

OAS withdraws elections mission over flawed process for Region Four vote count

-

The Organizati­on of American States (OAS) Election Observatio­n Mission yesterday withdrew from the country saying that the tabulation process for Region Four was not transparen­t and it has warned that the legitimacy of any government installed in these circumstan­ces will be open to question.

In a statement yesterday, the OAS mission said that the process being conducted by the Returning Officer for Region Four, Clairmont Mingo, to ascertain the results of the general and regional elections held on March 2 does not meet the required standard of fairness and transparen­cy.

Chief Justice Roxane George-Wiltshire’s ruling handed down on March 11 required the Returning Officer or Deputy Returning Officer to determine the best method of tabulating the Statements of Poll (SOPs) and included the expectatio­n “that the Returning Officer would act reasonably in ensuring a process that allows persons to observe what is being tabulated and how,” the statement said.

“This has not occurred. Instead, and without any plausible explanatio­n, the Returning Officer continued to ascertain the votes cast for each party list without affording the duly authorised candidates and counting agents an opportunit­y to see the Statements of Poll, in order to compare them with the copies in their possession. Such a process could have been easily facilitate­d using the same technology which allows the tabulation to be displayed,” the OAS mission said.

It stated that Mingo’s “defiance” of the Chief Justice’s orders and expectatio­ns, and his refusal to allow the SOPs to be exhibited, “gives credence to the allegation­s that the numbers being tabulated do not correspond” with the numbers appearing on the SOPs prepared following the March 2 polls.

“The Mission has noted that images of the Statements of Poll published by the PPP/Civic, on its website, which it claims were given to its polling agents after the ballots were counted at each polling station on the night of the elections, produce a result that is vastly different from that being declared by the Returning Officer and would have a decisive effect on the outcome of the national election,” the OAS mission said.

“To date, neither the Chief Elections Officer nor APNU has challenged the authentici­ty of the Statements of Poll published by the PPP/Civic by producing the copies in their possession. The implicatio­ns are deeply troubling and make it all the more necessary for the Returning Officer to display the Statements of Poll on which he is relying,” the statement said.

It noted that the OAS Election Observer Mission was pleased to have declared that the March 2 polls was, in almost all respects, well executed. The subsequent tabulation of the SOPs in the other nine regions was carried out in compliance with the law and no dispute has arisen in relation to the declaratio­n of results, it said.

“However, the process employed by the Returning Officer for Region 4 is not transparen­t and, based on the numbers that have emanated since the process was first disrupted, is unlikely to produce a result that is credible and is able to command public confidence,” the OAS mission said.

“The legitimacy of any government that is installed in these circumstan­ces will be open to question. This would be a terrible blow to the country’s democracy,” it said, adding that the people of Guyana do not deserve this.

“Given the circumstan­ces cited above, the OAS Electoral Observatio­n Mission regrets that it has no option but to withdraw from Guyana. The Chief of Mission will prepare his report for submission to the Secretary General,” it added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana