Stabroek News

It is the GPSU’s view that the elections were seriously compromise­d

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Dear Editor,

The Guyana Public Service Union (GPSU) takes this opportunit­y to respond to your newspaper’s inserts into the Union’s press statement carried on Monday July 20, 2020.

The GPSU is a democratic, rules based nonpartisa­n organizati­on and the decision to observe the elections was approved at all constituti­onal levels where the members voted unanimousl­y for the Union to be accredited as observers. This decision came about because the Public Servants are government employees and are responsibl­e for keeping the government machinery running. The Union believes that if its general membership is of the opinion that the elections were free, fair and free from fear they will be better disposed to serve the elected Government. Hence the observer team had to report their findings to the Executive Council, that ultimately deliberate­d on the findings, before the public release expressing the Union’s position. This is a rule requiremen­t in these matters, which took time because our Executive Officers are spread throughout the country. The circumstan­ces of the Covid-19 environmen­t also seriously curtailed the process.

Secondly, the understand­ing was that each observer group observe the elections process and at the end of the process report their observatio­ns/comments to GECOM. The Union tried to abide by this rule, without emulating other observer groups that were in the media regularly, some issuing veiled instructio­ns to GECOM during the incomplete process. The Union is of the belief that such actions could only have negative effects.

At this point however the Union thinks it is timely for its members to understand the facts and conclusion­s drawn. The Union’s functions are always profession­al and at no time does it see the need to “parrot” or “piggyback” on what is said by others. It may at times draw similar conclusion­s, but its independen­ce is assured.

The Recount Process took 33 days and every day at the tabulation Centre the irregulari­ties were highlighte­d and televised to the nation and was also featured in the CEO’s report. All the other parties were present when the observatio­n reports were made. The count was also streamed live, nationally. In fact, each party agent signed the observatio­n report for each box as the boxes were examined, so, to say that there were no irregulari­ties is like being the proverbial ostrich – burying your heads in the sand. Putting it bluntly, it is blatant dishonesty. Especially after the Chairperso­n of GECOM wrote the Chief Immigratio­n Officer and the Registrar General, who confirmed that the names of the persons submitted were either out of the country on the date of the election March 02 2020 or were deceased. All that the GPSU advanced was already public knowledge. It was thereafter the responsibi­lity of GECOM to determine the magnitude of the irregulari­ties and how it affected the March 2, 2020 General and Regional Elections. Nonetheles­s, the GPSU is of the view that based on the absence of major statutory documentat­ion and the fact that there were proven irregulari­ties, the elections were seriously compromise­d.

The report of the Caricom team was a disappoint­ment, because any student of statistics would know that where there is an occurrence of irregulari­ty, a representa­tive sample ought to be examined before any conclusion is drawn, but if not the weight or effect of the missing documents on the population should be used to determine credibilit­y. The report was however concluded without serious considerat­ion to either of these necessary aspects, except to flippantly trivialize the importance of the missing documentat­ion, in relation to the outcome. In fact, they ruled on the numerical accuracy and not the content, which majorly affect validity.

Article 162 of the constituti­on emphasises the main functions of GECOM, among which is to ensure the fairness and transparen­cy of the elections. Hence after any electoral process there should be no dispute as to the validity of the ballots and thereafter its integrity should be sacrosanct. The Recount Exercise definitive­ly exposed a series of irregulari­ties, many of which flowed from the flawed voters’ list of electors numbering around 650,000. Based on a population approximat­ing 750,000, this is an impossibil­ity.

The Union is of the strong conviction that: (a) the 2020 General and Regional Elections should be rendered null and void and of no effect; (b) that GECOM should produce a sanitized list of electors; (c) GECOM should take punitive action against all defaulting Presiding Officers and Returning Officers; and that a new General and Regional Elections be held as soon as possible. In this way both sides of the divide will be comfortabl­e with the results.

The press should therefore be profession­al, responsibl­e and impartial when dealing with a matter of such national importance and shy away from sensationa­lism and cronyism.

A fundamenta­l principle of the GPSU is that whatever position it takes must stand up to scrutiny.

Yours faithfully,

Indira Thakurdin for the Guyana Public Service Union

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