Deccan Chronicle

Most polls not free and fair: Study

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London, April 27: The number of elections across the world has reached an all-time high but it has done little to increase the quality of democracy, according to a new study.

The study by researcher­s from the University of Birmingham and the London School of Economics said that a remarkably high proportion of national elections are not free and fair enabling authoritar­ian leaders to remain in power with the emergence of new technology playing a part in the process of manipulati­on. The researcher­s revealed their findings in ‘How to rig an election' published by Yale Books.

Based on more than 500 interviews and their own experience of watching elections on the ground in countries including; Belarus, Kenya, Madagascar, Nigeria, Thailand and Tunisia, Professor Nic Cheeseman and Brian Klaas reveal the extent of the “democratic decay” that has benefitted dictators around the world, the Birmingham University said in a release on Friday.

Most worryingly, the research demonstrat­es that not only do elections often fail to remove authoritar­ian leaders from power, but in many cases they actually give ailing authoritar­ian regi-mes a boost, making them appear more legitimate and opening up new funding streams.

As a result, authoritar­ian systems that hold elections turn out to be more stable than those that do not.

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