Stabroek News

GECOM has to do better job on providing info to public

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Dear Editor,

For democracy to stand GECOM cannot lose the battle for truth. Following media coverage on GECOM throughout the election cycle, but more particular­ly at this period of post voting controvers­y the public - domestic, regional and internatio­nal – will benefit greatly from informatio­n emanating directly from the Commission. This is a given as GECOM has the constituti­onal mandate of responsibi­lity for many of these processes which are under review by the external public.

As a workers’ representa­tive and being personally concerned about the accuracy of non-GECOM informatio­n and its impact on the public about matters that GECOM has firsthand informatio­n of, I am calling on GECOM to provide this nation with a daily, or otherwise determined, convenient schedule of updates. Where necessary correction­s of every bit of informatio­n that is placed in the public domain and can affect public confidence in the process should be addressed via all available media. Of note, GECOM’s Facebook account that can be an accessible source of informatio­n was addressed on the 2nd, 3rd and 17th only in the month of March when so many contentiou­s issues have occurred.

GECOM does itself no well by remaining silent and being drowned in a tsunami of informatio­n put forward by sources that may not have a vested interest in supporting GECOM’s independen­ce and ability to perform its constituti­onal duty without interferen­ce. In Stabroek News, the 20th March, 2020 it is insinuated in an article captioned `Six parties call for vote recount urge protection of ballot boxes’ that the ballot boxes, particular­ly those of Region 4, are at risk of being compromise­d. In another article recently, state police guarding the boxes also surfaced as an issue of mistrust. These are just examples of the many areas of informatio­n that require clarificat­ion for they serve to undermine public trust and the credibilit­y of this constituti­onal office.

GECOM is reminded that as often as informatio­n that threatens its public image, independen­ce and credibilit­y is made public, an immediate response becomes absolutely necessary, if the Commission’s public image and ability to perform its constituti­onal duty without external interferen­ce is to be upheld. GECOM must take responsibi­lity for disseminat­ing informatio­n that will contribute to creating a post electoral communicat­ion environmen­t driven by valid and credible facts. If democracy is to stand GECOM cannot afford to lose this battle to destroy its truth with informatio­n influencin­g public opinion against it.

Yours faithfully,

Lincoln Lewis

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