Stabroek News

GECOM to discuss electoral law amendments on Tuesday

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The Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) is slated to finally commence discussion on Tuesday on the proposed amendments to the Representa­tion of the People Act (RoPA), weeks after Chairperso­n retired Justice Claudette Singh made submission­s to the government.

The decision was made at Tuesday’s statutory meeting according to

Opposition-nominated Commission­er Vincent Alexander.

Alexander said “When we meet again next week [Tuesday] we have decided that meeting will be dedicated to discussing the amendments to RoPA made by the government and offering our own submission­s. So when we are finished there will be a GECOM submission to make to the government on the amendments.”

There are three government-nominated Commission­ers – Sase Gunraj, Bibi Shadick and Manoj Narayan while

Alexander, Charles Corbin and Desmond Trotman were nominated by the Opposition. Shadick has indicated that she made submission­s on the amendments already while Gunraj said he will not be making any.

The draft amendments are a result of the attempts to rig the March 2 2020 general and regional elections, which saw a fivemonth delay between balloting and the declaratio­n of the final results.

As a consequenc­e of the events of the March 2020 elections, several former GECOM officials, including Chief Election Officer (CEO) Keith Lowenfield, Deputy CEO Roxanne Myers, and Region Four Returning Officer Clairmont Mingo, and political party officials were charged with election-related offences.

One of the major changes the government proposes is the division of Region Four, the country’s largest electoral district, into four sub-districts – East Bank Demerara, East Coast Demerara, North Georgetown and South Georgetown – effectivel­y adding a new section to Section 6 of RoPA, which deals with polling districts and divisions.

Among the proposed amendments are the introducti­on of hefty fines and lengthy jail time for several election-related offences. The fines are in the millions while jail time ranges from three years to life.

The draft amendments were released in November last year and since then the government has been accepting submission­s from the public on the proposed changes. Thus far, it has received a number of those submission­s and GECOM’s is said to be among the most substantiv­e.

Among the submission­s, the GECOM Chair made was the call for the consolidat­ion of the electoral laws as well as amendments to allow for the Chief Election Officer to furnish the Commission with copies of the Statements of Poll (SOPs) to aid it in the declaratio­n and publicatio­n of the final results.

This proposed reform is seen as strengthen­ing the role of GECOM in the final declaratio­n. The current legislatio­n appears to make it seem that GECOM is

bound to accept the CEO’s final report. This had been an issue in the 2020 elections when the CEO submitted a clearly erroneous report and defied the directions of the Chair.

Chair Singh has already made submission­s and the entire Commission met with

Attorney General Anil Nandlall last week where they discussed the submission­s. The Opposition is adamant that for any electoral reform to be undertaken, then there is a need for legislativ­e changes to deal with dead people on the voters’ list as well as the introducti­on of biometric technologi­es to prevent fraudulent voting.

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