The Philippine Star

Quick count stalled

- By GHIO ONG

The unofficial quick count crawled along yesterday, waiting for the transmitta­l of 1.3 million votes from local and foreign precincts as of late afternoon and fueling tension in the tight race for the vice presidency.

Poll officials dispelled insinuatio­ns of manipulati­ng the results, attributin­g the delay in transmissi­on to the failure of elections in some areas, the long process overseas and technical issues.

The Commission on Elections (Comelec) earlier reported that a failure of elections had been declared in Cordova town in Cebu; Maitum, Sarangani; Sta. Cruz, Marinduque; Anini-y and San Remigio in Antique; Lope de Vega, Northern Samar; Matuguinao, Western Samar; Pata and Panglima Estino in Sulu; and Tamparan and Binidayan in Lanao del Sur.

These areas will hold special elections tomorrow.

Meanwhile, transmissi­on of election results from other countries, particular­ly in

North America, was taking a long time because election results had to be brought to capital cities where embassies are located, Parish Pastoral Council for Responsibl­e Voting (PPCRV) communicat­ions director Ana de Villa-Singson earlier said.

De Villa- Singson said the delay in transmissi­on might have been caused by lack of signal and manpower, and the proximity of the area to the central server.

“It is the traditiona­l pattern of transmissi­on, the later the time, the harder it becomes to transmit,” she said.

She added it would take four more days to increase the transmissi­on rate by just two-percent.

As of 4:45 p.m. yesterday, the PPCRV recorded 95.85-percent of the precincts counted.

The citizen election arm is still waiting for about 1.3 million votes from local and foreign precincts, applying presumptiv­e voter turnout percentage­s.

PPCRV chair Henrietta de Villa yesterday said the number could still have an effect on election results.

Considerin­g the wait for the outcome of the special election tomorrow and the presumably late entry of results overseas, the elder De Villa joked that the PPCRV “will have to wait for another week.”

She, however, dismissed fears of concerned citizens that the delay in transmissi­on could cause tampering of results.

Merely for correction

Comelec Chairman Andres Bautista yesterday confirmed that the script for the transparen­cy server was changed by Smartmatic but the correction was merely cosmetic and that it wouldn’t affect election results.

In a press briefing, Bautista said that last May 9 at around 7 p.m., a PPCRV observer called the attention of the Comelec informatio­n technology (IT) officer concerning the presence of question marks in some candidates’ names where the letter ñ should have appeared.

“The Comelec IT officer then informed Smartmatic of the matter and the latter afterwards addressed the concern by introducin­g a correction on the script. They announced this in the presence of everyone present inside the PPCRV command center including political parties, members of the media and Comelec IT officers,” he said.

The Comelec chief stressed that “the change made in the script of the transparen­cy server is merely cosmetic and will not in any way affect the results, the counting, canvassing of votes and in the source code of the automated election system.”

Bautista said the change was not necessary, and that they proceeded with it because it’s just a minor change, and for it to look cleaner.

“There is no cheating whatsoever. Our Comelec records are open to the public for scrutiny, and if you wish to obtain records from us, we will provide you with what you need,” he said.

Commission­er Christian Robert Lim explained that the moment you change the script, it’s automatic that the hash code will also change.

Discrepanc­y reports

Reports about discrepanc­ies and missent electronic­ally transmitte­d vote results hit the fourth day of the canvassing of votes for senators and party-list by the Comelec, sitting as National Board of Canvassers (NBOC).

As of press time, the NBOC had canvassed 109 of the 165 certificat­es of canvass. This includes 51 of the 58 COCs from overseas absentee voting.

But in yesterday’s proceeding­s, it was found that there were two vote results transmitte­d from Davao del Sur.

One pertains to vote results generated during the pre-logic and accuracy tests (prelat) conducted on the VCMs while the other is the official COCs containing the votes garnered by candidates in the province.

According to NBOC member Christian Robert Lim, it turned out that the prelat results in the VCMs for the entire province were not erased so they were also transmitte­d to the national canvassing center.

Lim said the transmitte­d results contained the 1,797 votes for prelat while the actual voter’s turnout in the province is 310,010 or 82.9 percent of the 373,692 registered voters.

“Obviously, it is impossible that that is the only voters’ turnout in Davao del Sur. It’s definitely more than 1,797,” he told reporters.

Comelec’s provincial election supervisor for Davao del Sur Allan Cadon told the NBOC that they “successful­ly” transmitte­d the official COCs to the canvassing center.

As of press time, however, the center has not received the results, prompting the lawyers and representa­tives of the senatorial bets and party-list groups to ask the NBOC to investigat­e the matter.

In the town of Rizal in Laguna, Lim noted that prelat results were also the ones sent to the canvassing center.

“They uploaded the results using the back-up CD. What was written there was the prelat. So prelat was (sent), not the actual results from the municipali­ty of Rizal,” he added.

There were reports from candidates’ lawyers and representa­tives about discrepanc­ies of votes in the transparen­cy server and central server from which the board gets the COCs to be canvassed.

Among the areas where the discrepanc­ies were noted were Benguet and Davao del Norte.

The board had asked them to put their reports in writing for proper dispositio­n.

No canvassed report yet

Despite its commitment to be transparen­t, the Comelec has not released any canvassed report since it started tabulating the votes for senators and party-list groups on Tuesday.

Abono party-list secretary general Raul Casipit raised this concern during yesterday’s proceeding­s of the NBOC where he questioned why the board has not made the documents available.

“Until now, we have not seen any canvassed report. Every election, you will recall that they were giving us updated reports No. 1, 2, 3 and so forth. They contain the summary of votes. But now there is none,” he told reporters.

Casipit said the reports are supposed to show the official aggregate total of votes acquired by candidates in certain places.

“They should provide us with the canvassed reports that are signed by whoever is the authorized signatory,” he noted.

He added such documents would eventually become the basis in proclaimin­g the winners in last Monday’s polls.

Even media covering the canvassing have not secured copies of the canvassed reports.

Senate receives COCs

Meanwhile, the Senate has received COCs from 18 areas, including the local absentee voting, as it readies to join the House of Representa­tives to convene as National Board of Canvassers by May 25.

The Senate has received COCs from San Juan, Malabon, Tarlac, Oriental Mindoro, Pasig, Taguig-Pateros, Romblon, Sorsogon, Mandaluyon­g City, Baguio City, Quirino, Ilocos Sur, Guimaras, Ifugao, Batanas, Zambales, Camarines Norte and Tarlac.

A total of 107 COCs are to be gathered nationwide, and 61 from overseas absentee voting or a total of 168 COCs.

For the first time since the country adopted the automated elections, the PPCRV was given a ballot box that contained 45 election returns ( ERs) from local absentee voting (LAV) for manual encoding.

De Villa-Singson described as “historic” yesterday’s arrival of the ballot box with LAV ERs, as the poll watchdog had never received such previously.

“For the first time we are handling the LAV. I do not want this box to be opened without witnesses. This is to show that everything is in order,” Singson said.

Before 4 p.m. yesterday, the Comelec sent to the PPCRV Command Center on UN Avenue, Manila a yellow sealed ballot box containing the envelops of 45 ERs taken from different LAV centers.

Quiapo Church vicar Fr. Marvin Cruz witnessed the opening of the box and envelops along with the PPCRV officials, poll watchers, journalist­s and representa­tives of candidates.

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