Philippine Daily Inquirer

Numbers validate fewer voters in ARMM

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Trend

CITY—NUMBERS MARAWI don’t lie.

Officials involved in a new registrati­on of voters in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) to replace voters’ lists that had been nullified for being bloated said the number of new registrant­s emerging from the new registrati­on process is validating what election workers have long been suspecting—that voters’ lists in ARMMhad been tampered with.

In Lanao del Sur alone, the new registrati­on of voters indicated that the actual number of voters is about 16 percent lower than what had been listed in the province’s nullified voting list which contained 522,000 names.

Elections Commission­er Armando Velasco said in a phone interview that 439,782 people registered as voters in Lanao del Sur at the end of the 10-day reregistra­tion of voters in ARMM.

The figure was more than 80,000 lower than what had been listed in the nullified voters’ list of the province, which had gained notoriety for poll fraud.

In other parts of the ARMM, according to Comelec spokespers­on James Jimenez, the figures tend to show also a decline in the number of registered voters.

In Basilan, 155,831 people registered compared to the old list of 179,811 voters. In TawiTawi, 135,829 registered compared to the old list of 167,610 voters. In Sulu, 300,611 registered compared to 341,536 in the old list. In Maguindana­o, 536,356 registered compared to 567,443 in the old list.

Velasco, commission­er in charge of Lanao del Sur, said officials expect the number of voters to be smaller as minors and socalled flying voters, or people who tried to register in but are not residents of the province, will surely be removed from the list.

He said biometrics would help Comelec ferret out illegal registrant­s. Biometrics is a system of determinin­g identity through what are considered to be tamper proof marks like a person’s fingerprin­ts.

Tamper proof

“Even if they used fictitious names, we can still determine those engaged in double registrati­on. There are no two similar fingerprin­ts,” said Velasco.

He said he also ordered an inventory of all applicatio­n forms that had been marked because they had been filled out by minors.

“These would be automatica­lly excluded,” said Velasco. The fingerprin­t matching could take up to two months to complete, however, he said.

Velasco said Comelec has given priority to closer scrutiny of registrant­s in several towns that had a high turnout of registrant­s.

The towns are Maguing, Piagapo, Madalum, Bumbaran, Calanogas, Wao, LumbaBayab­ao, Buadipuso-Buntong, Kapai and Marantao.

‘Nagging worry’

In Cotabato City, the Parish Pastoral Council for Responsibl­e Voting (PPCRV) said in the five provinces of ARMM, the number of minors who tried to register as voters made up 15 to 20 percent of the turnout.

The attempt to register minors as voters, said PPCRV head Henrietta de Villa in a statement, is a “nagging worry that persists for me.”

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