The 18-point proposal to improve
election results
E. Ablorh-Odjidja
December 02, 2013
After almost a year of political drama and trauma in 2013, the
Petition Case in Ghana came to a close. No matter how
unsatisfactory the result, all accepted the decision by
the Supreme Court. But most to this day, are in
agreement that our electoral process is flawed.
Last week the political parties in parliament, and the
IEA, presented an 18-point proposal to the Electoral Commission
for reforms within the electoral process, with the aim of
avoiding in the future the headaches from 2013.
The proposal presented, however, has its
own inherent danger; the size and the reach of the 18 points
offer plenty of opportunities for debate, confusion and
inertia.
Instead of a clear, one or two bullet approach, easy to
implement and supervise, we have this load of head-scratching
affair.
Central to the Petition Case, after 2013 election, was
obviously the
over-voting.
To curb the constant occurrence of
over-votes in our elections, biometric registration
was instituted prior to the elections. It failed.
Simply stated, some citizens were
allowed to vote even though they were not biometrically
registered.
The odd voters could only do so because of some official
acquiescence or malfeasance. And not because they had been born within the short
span between the end
of the biometric campaign and the elections, and suddenly
became mature enough to
vote on the day of the elections!
This over-vote condition in our elections is troublesome.
We need a clean break from the occurrences: A requirement by
law for a system that does not allow over-votes; one
that triggers automatic re-voting and/or cancellation of
the results in constituencies with margins of votes that
exceed what is registered.
Obviously, the key requirement in the above set-up is an
efficient biometric registration system.
A system that clearly and cleanly
identifies qualified voters, that also allows each
qualified citizen his one vote.
The approach to the solution must be deliberate and mechanical.
The lengthy approach offered by the political parties
and the IEA, reported by Ghana Business News article of
November 27, 2013, overstates the solution:
“The 18-point proposals include provisions that the EC
work with defined programmes and published timelines to
ensure certainty in the implementation of the programmes.
They also recommended that there must be a fixed number
of constituencies to be reviewed periodically in
accordance with the law and in line with population
movement. According to the IEA and the political
parties, there should be no review of constituency
boundaries in an election year.”
The above is just the simplified version of the
proposal. By the time you get through the full 18 points, you
begin to wonder where to start the reform.
Some may argue that the above proposal is the
sophisticated approach. But in a simple society
like ours, there is no reason to make things more
complex than they really are.
Start with the thought that the over-votes in the 2012
elections were
deliberate and humanly manufactured.
We had a vote count that was vastly numerous
than biometrically and officially registered.
The need to fix the above flaw, to avoid the potential trouble
before the next elections that is only two
years away, is urgent.
So what to do?
Start with cleaning up the current voter
register while making sure that people
only register for the constituency in which they intend
eventually to vote.
Totals on the register for each
constituency must be published or displayed
locally and known before the next election to
prevent surprises.
After the above, then the no over-vote
limitation can be imposed.
Next in line is the testing of the biometric
registration system and the training of human operators.
The Electoral Commission must again verify, test, and
approve the efficacy of the entire current system. If found
wanting, a new system must be commissioned.
Surely, there are proven effective systems somewhere in
the world, human and machine, that can efficiently cover
the task of registering without flaws our meager
population of 24 million people.
India, a country with a population of some 1.2 billion
people, was massing up successful biometric
identifications for its population just about the same
time we were marking ours in 2012.
The BBC reported in February 12, 2013 that “The world's
largest biometric identity exercise, which is taking
place in India, is well on its way to reaching its
target of half the country's population.”
"We are enrolling at the rate of one million a day. We
have over 20,000 locations across the country where this
is happening…Now we are confident that we have built a
system to scale and it's just a question of widening the
reach and taking it to every nook and corner," the
report quoted Mr. Nandan Nilekani, a former head of
Infosys, one of Indian’s biggest IT companies.
The Indian project has not been without controversies
and debates. Some even have argued against the propriety
of having biometric identity.
There were challenges in
the courts against the policy as recent as September
2013 on the grounds that the identification order was
not a law passed by the Indian Parliament.
Ghana’s case is different. We have no problem with
legality. The essential point here is that we decided
and agreed on a biometric registration to keep our
elections in Ghana honest.
We have already bought the concept and invested in the
technology. What we need now is the superior
intervention to make the system work. This is the
deficiency any workable proposal must tackle first.
We need to make the biometric
identification and recognition system work. All
citizens of voting age must go through the process - if
they wish to vote.
The biometric system is already a familiar technology in
many countries. There are IT programmers in Ghana and
abroad that can supply the expertise. And even if we
lack the talent locally, we can still purchase the
proficiency from India, or elsewhere. There should be no
shame in this simple approach.
After all, we buy toothpicks from China, don’t we?
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, publisher, www.ghanadot.com,
Washington, DC, December 02, 2013
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