Supreme Court orders EC to clean up voters'
register immediately
The
Supreme Court has ordered the Electoral Commission to delete from the electoral
roll names of all dead people and persons who used the National
Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) to register to vote.
This,
according to the Court is because the register in its
current form, is not reasonably credible.
The apex
court also ordered the EC to allow those whose names will be removed because
they used the NHIS card as proof of citizenship to register, an opportunity to
register if they qualify.
The court
gave its ruling on a case brought by two politicians seeking to
challenge the credibility of Ghana's electoral roll.
The two
opposition politicians, a former Youth Leader of the People's National
Convention (PNC), Abu Ramadan and an NPP youth leader, Kwame Baffoe have been
insisting that the voters' register in its current state is not fit to be used
for the November election.
Since the
Electoral Commission rejected a demand to compile a new voters' register, the
two politicians are arguing that it should at least conduct an exercise to
clean up the document by removing names of persons deemed ineligible to be on
the roll.
This
validation process, they say would be deemed a compromise after months of
pressure from opposition parties on the EC yielded no results.
There are
voters on the register who used an outlawed National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS)
card to register to vote. The Electoral Commission (EC) has said it
can identify the names of those registrants.
Counsel
for the two sued the EC, Nana Asante Bediatuo applied to
introduce fresh evidence which suggested that the EC lied to the Apex court
when it stated that it could identify such voters on the electoral roll.
The
Supreme Court in its ruling on Thursday unanimously asked the EC to do all
it can to consult others in its work.
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