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Interview with Professor George Ayittey on the Petition before
the Supreme Court
By George Nyavor
Nyavor: Prof, as you know, the Supreme Court is holding hearings
on the petition filed by Nana Akuffo-Addo and two other NPP
members, challenging the results of the Dec 2012 elections. May
I interview you about your thoughts on the proceedings?
Ayittey: Well, I am not a lawyer or a constitutional expert;
neither do I belong to any political party in Ghana or the U.S.
Nyavor: It does not matter. Many people hold an opinion on how
the Supreme Court should rule. I just wanted to know what your
opinion is.
Ayittey: Well, I have no opinion on how the Supreme Court should
rule except to say that it should avoid the mistakes made by the
Supreme Court in Kenya add Venezuela which also handled a
similar case.
Nyavor: How similar were the two cases?
In Kenya’s March 4, 2013 presidential election, Uhuru Keyatta
won 50.07 percent of the vote and Raila Odinga won 43.28
percent. Only 8,000 votes separated the two. Subsequently,
Odinga filed a petition before the Kenya Supreme Court, alleging
election irregularities.
In Venezuela’s April 14 presidential election, the incumbent,
Nicolas Maduro,, who was handpicked by the late Hugo Chavez, won
50.7 percent of the and the opposition leader, Henrique Capriles,
who won 48.98 percent, has refused to concede defeat.
In all three cases, incumbents managed to win by a squeak: 50.7
in Ghana in Dec; 50.07 percent in Kenya and 50.7 percent in
Venezuela. In all three cases, the opposition alleged vote
irregularities and fraud.
Nyavor: What were the irregularities?
Ayittey: Odinga’s Coalition for Reform and Democracy (CORD) camp
alleged that:
• Though $9 million was spent by Kenya on biometric machinery
and registration, people voted without biometric verification;
• There were multiple instances of “over-vote,” where the total
number of ballots cast exceeded the total number of registered
voters;
• There appeared to be two electoral registers – one for the
presidential and the other for the parliamentary. There was a
mysterious expansion of over 1 million voters in the electoral
register for the presidential election but not for the
parliamentary.
• The opposition also complained about the sudden break-down of
bio-metric machines, necessitating an extension of voting for
another day, as well as the inexplicable break-down of
electronic transmission of poll results, which resulted in
returning officers being summoned to Nairobi to hand in the
results, which caused a 5-day delay in the announcement of the
results. The opposition claimed that all these fueled
speculation that the results were being “massaged.”
In Venezuela, Capriles complained of uneven playing field (the
state-controlled media failed to give him air time),
intimidation of his (opposition) supporters and stuffed ballot
boxes. Capriles's camp said its own count of polling station
tallies across the country showed that its candidate had won.
Among the specific allegations:
• There were 283 voting centers where opposition observers were
kicked out by ruling-party officials, in some cases violently.
• In 1,176 centers, Maduro took far more votes than Mr. Chávez
himself in the October vote—which suggested vote tampering.
• In 562 centers, supporters of the ruling party accompanied
voters as they cast their ballots, presumably to make sure
voters plumped for Maduro.
• There were some people 120 years old who voted and there were
600,000 dead people on the voter registry.
Further, the Electoral Commission is not independent: It has 5
members; 4 picked by Chavez and 1 by the opposition. Before the
vote, the Commission promised a full recount of the votes. In
fact, after the initial results were released late Sunday and
Maduro proclaimed victory, he said he welcomed a full recount.
But after the vote, the government reversed that decision the
next day, which brought thousands of protesters onto the
streets, banging pots and pan – a characteristic Latin American
style of protest. The street protests and ensuing violence
claimed the lives of 8 people, injuring scores.
As you can see, though not exactly the same, the grievances of
the NPP are similar.
Nyavor: And how did Kenya’s Supreme Court rule?
Ayittey: The Supreme Court issued a ruling rejecting the
opposition the petition on March 30, 2013 and declared Uhuru
Kenyatta the winner but did not give reasons for its rulings,
which it promised at a later date. About two weeks later, it
gave its reasons and in a slap to the Independent Electoral and
Boundaries Commission (IEBC), it declared that the IEDC should
not have included the invalid/spoilt votes in the calculation of
the final figures and percentages.
Nyavor: Why was this a bad ruling?
It was a bad ruling on five counts. First, given the highly
charged political atmosphere, they should have stayed above the
fray, instead of inserting themselves into it by declaring or
confirming one of the contestants as the winner. Now they risk
being seen as “compromised” or “partisan,” favoring one
candidate over the other.
Second, the SC ordered a re-tally of votes from 22 polling
stations out of a total of 33,400. The sample was too small.
Admittedly, the Supreme Court had only 6 days to make a ruling
and, further, CORD (the Odinga camp) may have suggested a
scrutiny of those 22 polling stations. However, if that small
sample revealed evidence of irregularities, logic suggests that
the large remainder must also contain irregularities that must
also be scrutinized. If a portion of the meat is spoilt, would
you cut it off and eat the rest?
Third, the decision did not erase the widespread suspicion that
there were nefarious attempts to manipulate the results and rig
the election. It was a bit of a stretch to attribute the
irregularities to “clerical” or “human error.” How does one
explain:
1. The sudden break-down of IT or electronic transmission of
results, necessitating manual tabulation?
2. The break-down of biometric equipment, necessitating voting
without biometric verification?
3. The mysterious expansion of over 1 million voters in the
electoral register for the presidential election but not for the
parliamentary?
Fourth, Kenya is dangerously polarized politically. Uhuru’s win
of 50.07 of the vote is one the narrowest majority and the
“minority” is nearly 50 percent of Kenyans who did not vote for
him. That means nearly half of Kenyans were not pleased with the
Supreme Court decision and will still feel aggrieved. This is
dangerous because, in Africa, it takes a small group of
determined mal-contents to wreak havoc and mayhem -- let alone
half of the electorate.
For example, in 1985, the late General Samuel Doe held elections
in Liberia. When it appeared that he was losing, he ordered the
vote count halted. Ballot boxes were then transported to a
secret location at the army barracks where the votes were
tallied and Doe declared the winner. Charles Taylor refused to
countenance this contumely and started a “bush war” with only
100 men. The rest is history. Similarly in Uganda, Yoweri
Museveni started out with only 27 men.
Fifth, the Supreme Court decision did not ease but rather
exacerbated tension in Kenya. The country is also deeply
polarized along tribal and religious lines. Gikuyus voted for
Kenyatta, Kalenjin for Ruto and Luo for Odinga. Religion or
tribal politics is a very dangerous proposition in any African
country. In Kenya, there is a perception that the Gilkuyus have
dominated both the political and economic scenes. Of Kenya’s
three presidents since independence in 1963, two – Jomo Kenyatta
and Mwai Kibaki -- have been Gikuyu; Daniel arap Moi is Kalenjin.
Further, the Kenyatta family are the largest land owners in
Kenya and among the richest in Africa.
In Nigeria, tribal politics led to the Biafran War (1967-70).
The Igbo, through their own hard work and determination, had
become very successful, dominating senior positions in
government, educational institutions, etc. But it bred tribal
resentment and persecution, which propelled the Igbo to secede.
Over 3 million – mostly Igbos – died in the ensuing war. In
Rwanda, tribal politics led to the 1994 genocide, in which 1
million Tutsis were slaughtered. In Ethiopia, tribal politics
has stunted that country’s growth prospects. In Ivory Coast, it
was the politics of religion. The country was split into the
Muslim North and Christian South after the Nov 2010 elections.
Similarly in Mali, where the Muslim Tuaregs have long chafed
under Christian South domination and discrimination. In Kenya,
the Mombasa Republican Council, a Muslim group, is demanding
secession. They were responsible for a series of attacks on
polling stations in the March 4 elections. Clearly, the Kenyan
Supreme Court cannot claim to be unaware of these developments.
Note: Nearly all the civil wars in post colonial Africa were
started by politically marginalized or excluded groups.
Nyavor: How Should Have the Supreme Court Ruled in Kenya and
Venezuela? Where were the blunders made?
Ayittey: I believe that the Supreme Court blundered in two
areas. First, by inserting itself into the political fray, which
caused it to lose much credibility and respect. The most
egregious blunder was committed by Venezuela’s Supreme Court.
The election was held on Sunday, April 14. The announcement of
the results sparked unrest and street protests that claimed
lives and the opposition camp called for a recount. On
Wednesday, April 17m, the Supreme Court rejected calls for a
recount of the disputed presidential vote. The Chief Justice,
Luisa Estella Morales, said that manual vote counting wasn't
possible in the country. "In Venezuela, the electoral process is
absolutely automated in a way that manual counting does not
exist," she said in televised comments. She cited the Chávez
government's 1999 constitution that "eliminated the manual
electoral process." But the opposition insisted that manual vote
counts do indeed exist and have been used in most votes when
electronic voting machines fail.
Clearly, the Chief Justice, Luisa Estella Morales, acted
improperly by rejecting publicly on television, calls for a
recount when the petition had not even been filed in the Supreme
Court. Before the vote on Sunday, the Electoral Commission had
promised a full recount if there was a dispute. Further, Maduro
himself said he would welcome a recount. But on Monday, the
government reversed itself and two days later, the Supreme Court
rejected calls for a recount. This makes the Supreme Court look
partisan and an accomplice to a conspiracy.
In Kenya, the Supreme Court inserted itself into the political
fray and looked partisan by declaring Kenyatta the winner. More
importantly, however, in so doing, it violated the principle of
separation of powers and prerogatives. Let me explain because
this is important.
Ministries have certain specific functions to play in government
or society. Ministries of Defense, Health, Transportation, etc.
have specific functions. Threats to the country’s security are
referred to the Ministry of Defense or Interior. If you want a
new passport, you do not go to the Ministry of Health.
Similarly, institutions have certain specific functions and
prerogatives. The creation of money and its management is the
sole prerogative of the Bank of Ghana. Elections and declaration
of winners is that of the Electoral Commission. The function of
the Supreme Court is to uphold and defend the Constitution and
the rule of law. It is NOT the role of a Supreme Court to
determine the winner or loser of a presidential election. That
is the role of the Electoral Commission.
Now, there are ELECTORAL RULES or LAWS that govern elections and
they are different from the statutory laws that govern our
everyday life. The ELECTORAL LAWS come into play every four
years and may say that:
1. Only those 18 or 19 years old and older are eligible to vote,
2. Only Kenyan NATIONALS are allowed to vote;
3. To vote, a Kenyan must be biometrically registered, etc.
There are also electoral rules or laws pertaining to how and
where the votes are to be counted; how the results are to be
transmitted to the central collation center; what constitutes a
spoilt ballot, an invalid ballot or a rejected ballot, etc.
These are the electoral rules or laws that are known to ALL
political candidates and must be followed by the Electoral
Commissioner and ALL political parties.
Now, after an election a dispute may arise. The opposition may
allege that:
1. Minors were allowed to vote,
2. Non-nationals were allowed to vote,
3. People voted without biometric verification,
4. The number of people who voted EXCEEDED the number of
registered voters in some constituencies,
5. The number of registered voters for the presidential election
exceeded the number of registered voters for the governorships
and parliamentary elections,
6. Polling stations were placed at secret location unbeknown to
the opposition (8 locations in the case of Ghana).
7. Other allegations of systematic fraud, etc.
When such a dispute is brought before a Supreme Court, its
responsibility is to investigate and determine if the ELECTORAL
LAWS were followed or broken by the Electoral Commissioner.
Remember, the primary role of a Supreme Court is NOT to
determine who won or lost an election but to uphold the rule of
law. The Supreme Court is NOT set up to overturn a decision by
the Electoral Commission. The EC must do so itself.
Nyavor: But people see the Ghana’s Supreme Court as the “final
arbiter” and expect it to declare who won the Dec election.
Ayittey: That is true but the Supreme Court should avoid falling
into that trap. It will lose its independence and respect if it
is seen as pro-NDC or pro-NPP by declaring one candidate as the
winner. Kenya’s Supreme Court blundered badly on this. By
declaring Kenyatta the winner, it over-stepped its bounds and
usurped the function of the Electoral Commission. It made
matters worse when it later declared that invalid or spoilt
votes should not have been included in the final vote count.
Under Ghana’s Constitution, the Supreme Court is only empowered
to rule on the VALIDITY of an election. Accordingly, I believe,
it should just stick to upholding the electoral rules. Where the
rules were not followed, it means the votes there were invalid
and should be thrown out. For example, if the SC finds that
minors or non-nationals were allowed to vote, this would be a
clear breach of the electoral laws. In this case, all that the
SC can say is to tell the EC to remove ballots cast by minors
and non-nationals, recount and re-tally the votes and declare
whoever has the greatest number of votes the winner. That is all
that a Supreme Court can do: Revert the issue back to the
Electoral Commission to fix the problem -- similarly with other
breaches or irregularities.
Now, if you want a higher court to do the recount and
re-tabulation with the power to OVER-RULE the Electoral
Commission, then you must create a special court for this
purpose. In Senegal, this special court is called the
Constitutional Court and in Ivory Coast it is called the
Constitution Council. Such a special court rules only on
electoral matters. It can decide who can contest a presidential
election. In Jan 2012, Senegal’s Constitutional Court ruled that
Wade can run for a third term – a ruling which sparked days of
rioting. In Nov 2010, Ivory Coast’s Constitutional Council
over-ruled the Electoral Commission and declared Laurent Gbagbo
the winner – a decision which plunged the country into civil
war. In both cases, the Constitutional Court and Council were
packed by the president’s cronies and supporters.
Kenya and Ghana do not have such special courts. Their Supreme
Courts do not have the power to overturn an Electoral Commission
declaration. All they can say is “We found some irregularities
in the results from some polling stations and ask the EC to fix
them.” By accepting the EC’s lame excuse of “clerical” or “human
error,” the Kenyan Supreme Court looked “partisan.”
Nyavor: What was the second blunder?
Ayittey: it pertains to the cavalier manner in which opposition
grievances were handled. The Kenyan Supreme Court rejected the
opposition petition out of hand and declared Kenyatta the
winner. In Venezuela, it was worse. There, the Supreme Court
rejected opposition calls for a recount – even before such a
petition had been filed before it.
Go to
To make matters worse, the president-elect,
Nicolas Maduro, dismissed the opposition as “fascists.”
Opposition challenges in both Kenya and Venezuela were not
handled well. As a former university professor, many a student
has challenged the final grade that I gave them. To start the
appeal process, they could petition the Chairman of the
Department. If they so, he may refer them back to me to try and
resolve the dispute. Regardless of whether the petitions are
frivolous, baseless or not, we (the Chairman and I) both make
every effort to give the students a FAIR hearing and attempt to
resolve the matter to everyone’s satisfaction.
This is important because we never dismiss any grievance or
petition out of hand as “groundless” and the Chairman strives to
show that he is impartial and does not automatically side with
the professor. So if a student’s grade is just 2 points short of
a B+, I might upon re-grading award him those 2 points and
change his grade to B+. We make this effort because we want to
student to feel that he is part of the university community and
that his grievance was adequately redressed to his satisfaction.
This is what I expected the Kenyan Supreme Court to do. To
revert the issue back to the Electoral Commission and say, “We
found some irregularities in the results from the sample of 22
polling stations. Check the results from the remaining 33,378
polling stations and make the necessary adjustments. If none of
the two top candidates secure more than 50 percent of the vote
then schedule a date for a run-off.”
A run-off would mop up the stench of tribalism as it would force
candidates to canvass for votes or court tribal groups other
than their own. It would also put to rest the suspicion that the
March 4 vote was manipulated or rigged. My preference would be a
re-run of the entire elections because of the high number of
rejected ballots. Voters were confused. This time, however, a
new Electoral Commissioner should be employed. [The current one,
Isaack Hassan, cannot be trusted.] The difference in cost of
running a run-off and a complete re-run is likely to be same as
it is the same electorate voting again. If a portion of the meat
is spoilt, the entire meat should be thrown out.
It is quite possible that correction of the irregularities and
re-count may not change anything or result in a run-off and it
is also possible Odinga may well lose a run-off. But doing
things this way gives the aggrieved party the satisfaction that
its grievance was seriously addressed and not just brushed
aside. I believe this is how one keeps confidence in the
electoral system as well as independence of the Supreme Court.
As it stands now, the aggrieved party may feel the Supreme Court
sided with the Electoral Commission and brushed off their
grievance as due to “clerical error.” This can destroy
confidence in the electoral system as well as the credibility of
the Supreme Court itself. As Michael Wrong wrote in the
International Herald Tribune on April 2:
“Civil-society campaigners, who were briefly shocked into
silence by this weekend’s Supreme Court ruling, are bracing for
a long campaign in the defense of the bill of rights. One issue
they will have to tackle — in a country polarized as never
before — is the political disengagement of people who queued for
eight hours in the sun to vote, saw the tallying process grind
to a halt, digested the damning details of the petitions citing
election-law violations, only to be told this botched process
was free and fair after all. Odinga has predicted a surge in
voter apathy given that “what has happened here is a replica, a
repeat of what happened five years ago.”
A Facebook page created over the weekend captured that
bitterness. Entitled “I will NEVER VOTE in a Kenyan election,”
it had attracted over 25,700 likes by midday Tuesday. “We are
done with Independent Judiciary, Independent Electoral
Commission, we are done,” reads reads one post.. “Let all
Kenyans be done with VOTING, the most useless exercise in
Kenya.” (http://latitude.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/04/02/kenyattas-victory-is-a-defeat-for-kenya-and-justice/)
Nyavor: Any last word or lessons to be learned?
Ayittey: The situation in Venezuela has improved dramatically
and tension haseased after intensive lobbying efforts by Brazil.
As the Wall Street Journal (April 19, 2013) reported:
“Officials from Brazil and other nations lobbied Nicolás Maduro
in recent days to back away from his hard-line stance and accept
a review of the votes as a means to strengthen the credibility
of his election, and to help calm street protests from
opposition voters who believe the election was rigged.
The lobbying effort came to a head Thursday at an emergency
meeting of a new Latin American security forum, called Unasur.
Mr. Maduro arrived at the meeting with the audit proposal in
hand. Unasur, co-founded by Brazil, stands out because it
explicitly excludes the U.S.” (p.A11).
Brazilian companies and banks underpin important sectors of the
Venezuelan economy and there have been concerns about political
instability and widespread bloodshed in Venezuela.
The move by Maduro and elections authorities to allow a recount
is a face-saving exit strategy for both that spaes the country
turmoil and bloodshed. It allows opposition leaders to claim
that their demands have been heard and it also strengthens the
legitimacy of Mr. Maduro's presidency.
The only sad thing is that it took an outside entity – Brazil –
to knock some sense into the government officials and push them
to do what they should have done in the first place. Eight
people are dead and scores injured because of the intransigence.
Now, the Venezuela Supreme Court, which rejected outright calls
for a recount, will now have to eat its own words.
As for Ghana’s Supreme Court, my heart goes out for the
Justices. They are caught between a rock and a hard place.
Whatever decision they come out with will displease some people.
But it is not their fault. Rather, the Constitution, which may
need revising:
First, there should be a Constitutional requirement that all
electoral disputes be resolved before the final results are
announced. This was not done in December, which is why the issue
landed on the laps of the Justices.
Second, the time span between elections and the inauguration of
the new president is too short for disputes to be resolved.
Either move the election day to November or the inauguration day
to February to allow sufficient time for the disputes to be
resolved.
Third, when the election of a new president is being challenged
in the Supreme Court, it would be judicious to put any
inauguration on hold until the dispute is resolved. You cannot
ask the Chief Justice to swear in a new president when at the
same time there is a petition before her/his own court
challenging the validity of his election.
Fourth, there should be time limit on the ruling. Kenya’s
Supreme Court had two weeks to make a ruling and Ghana’s case
has dragged on for four months.
Finally, the Supreme Court should aggressively push for a
Constitutional Review. Although the current 1992 Constitution
has been revised, it is still terrible. Among its defects are
the following:
• A very powerful Executive who appoints:
a. The Speaker of Parliament,
b. All the Supreme Court Justices,
c. 7 of the 11-member Police Commission,
d. 30 percent of District Assemblymen
e. 11 of the 25-member Council of State
This guts separation of powers and checks and balances when the
President appoints heads of the very institutions that are
supposed to check his powers.
• We have too many ministers and deputy ministers – about 74 at
last count for a small country.
• The Council of State has outlived its usefulness and needs to
be abolished.
• We have too many parallel institutions with overlapping
functions and jurisdictions.
The excessive duplication of administrative functions has gotten
so dire that the government consumes all it collects in revenue,
leaving little or no savings to finance investment or capital
expenditures. The cost of keeping the government running
(Recurrent Expenditures) has risen dramatically. In 2011, total
revenue stood at GH¢12 billion (or $7.5 billion). However,
Recurrent Expenditure (GH¢9 billion) plus Transfers (GH¢2.4
billion) plus Interest Payments (GH¢1.7 billion) added up to GH¢13
billion and left the government with negative savings. That, in
turn, meant the government had to borrow to finance Capital
Expenditures on infrastructure projects. And does the
multiplicity of ministries and agencies do their work?
The absurdity of all this became apparent when the “Woyome
scandal” erupted in early 2012. A businessman and self-acclaimed
financier of the ruling NDC party, Alfred Woyome, received a
gargantuan GH¢51 million judgment debt for the abrogation of a
contract to refurbish sports stadia. It was later discovered
that he had no contract with the government. Nonetheless, when
the scandal broke, a plethora of government agencies and
institutions with conflicting jurisdictions sprinted to
investigate. They are the Police (CID), Bureau of National
Investigations (BNI), the Attorney-General’s office,
Auditor-General’s Office, CHRAJ, SFO, Fast Track Courts, the
Public Accounts Committee of Parliament, the High Court and then
on top of all these, the president set up the Economic and
Organized Crimes Office (EOCO) – at least 10 of them and all
this battalion of investigators are on government pay-roll. And
what happened to the “Woyome Scandal”? What did this armada of
investigators accomplish?
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