A group calling itself Mass Action Committee (MAC) has stated the need for a new biometric voters register is no longer an option, but an urgent necessity.
The Mass Action Committee finds the decision of the EC to compile a new voter register as both appropriate and timely, adding its support for the EC “is guided by technical viability concerns of the present Biometric Voter Management System and financial considerations.”
Speaking at a press conference in Accra, spokesperson for the group, Atik Mohammed, outlined several reasons why the country needs a new voter’s register ahead of the 2020 election.
“As you are aware, the current system used by the EC is beleaguered with many challenges. We begin with the challenges associated with the Biometric Verification Registration (BVR) Kits. Ladies and gentlemen, the BVRs were procured in 2011 and have been in use since then. The last time the EC purchased these kits was in 2013 (they bought 500 pieces). This implies that, the BVRs are technically nine years old. They have therefore become obsolete,” he said.
He further said there are other non-technical issues that justify the need for a new register and that it is beyond dispute that, there are still NHIS card holders on the electoral register. “This implies that, the audit of 2015 could not clean the register of these illegal names. The presence of these names on the electoral roll call into question the reliability of the register.
And our best shot at eliminating these people from the register is by doing a new register,” Mr Atik added.
According to them group, it is also a fact that, riding the electoral register of dead people is an uphill task explaining, “By compiling a new register, we are afforded an opportunity to reduce the number of ghosts on our register to the barest minimum at least for the 2020 general election whiles exploring the possibility of closer cooperation with the births and deaths registry in future.
The Mass Action Committee debunked the assertion in some quarters that compiling a new register will be a drain on the economy.
“One of the arguments that have been vociferously articulated by those opposed to the production of a new register is that, the process will be costly.
The fact is that, the reverse is true. Compared to the quotations that the previous EC agreed to on June 28, 2018 from the last vendor, procurement of new equipment will result in savings of $18,364,500.00 equivalent to GHS 104,677,650.00,” the spokesperson of the group clarified.
The group also seized the opportunity to dispel the misleading notion that, the final register will be ready only by November 8, 2020. “This deliberate falsity is simply intended to court public anger and to paint a picture of ill-preparedness towards the planned 18th April registration exercise.
Based on the arguments advanced, the group said, it is clear that for the country to have a reliable and sustainable electoral register, there is an urgent need for a new electoral roll.
“We must all endeavor to go out in our numbers and register so that, we can exercise our franchise when the time comes.”
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