Dr. Bawumia after his testimony
Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Friday April 26, 2013.
Yesterday hearing of the election petition at the
Supreme Court was characterized by heated arguments over attempts by the
Electoral Commission (EC) to ‘smuggled’ in pink sheets as evidence.
The EC through its counsel, James Quarshie-Idun had
tried to tender what it claimed to be an original pink sheet used in the December
2012 general election in evidence when the Supreme Court refused to admit the
document.
The commission was seeking to use a particular pink
sheet from the Juaso Court Hall polling station to prove a point that the
special voting that took place ahead of the general election also had pink
sheets with special codes.
However, the star witness in the election petition, Dr.
Mahamudu Bawumia, insisted during cross examination by Mr Quarshie-Idun that there
is no polling station code for special voting because there are no pink sheets.
Surprise
Pink Sheet
Counsel
(Quarshie-Idun): Do you have the Juaso Court Hall
with you?
Witness
(Dr Bawumia): Yes my lord, I have it.
Counsel:
So Dr. Bawumia, you have in your hands three documents?
Witness:
Yes my lords.
Counsel:
One is MBT 2; can you tell us the polling station name?
Witness:
Juaso Court Hall, F262901
Counsel:
The second one is MBY 15
Witness:
Yes, that’s also Juaso Court Hall
Counsel:
And code
Witness:
F262901
Counsel:
So that is duplication?
Witness:
No, it isn’t duplication, my lords we presented these three pink sheets during
my Evidence-in-Chief as an example of duplicate polling stations codes and
Juaso Court Hall happens to have three pink sheets and we mentioned that this
is one of the irregularities that we are pointing to. The pink sheets have
different presiding officers and signatures of the agents for the same polling
station…(At this moment, the bench reminded the counsel that he did not mention
the third pink sheet)
Counsel:
We have MBT.
Justice
Atuguba: MBT what?
Counsel:
MBT only, my lord. What is the code (referring to the witness).
Witness:
F262901. It is the same polling station code for all three separate pink
sheets.
Counsel:
The one which you have is the one which has total number of valid votes as 124?
Witness:
Yes my lord.
Counsel:
(Pulling out a pink sheet and on the verge of presenting it to the witness) My
lord, I have the original of the pink sheet…or before that, I am suggesting to
you, Dr. Bawumia, that MBT was Special Voting.
Witness: My lords, I do not agree.
Justice
Atuguba: You are saying all these MBTs relate to Special
Voting?
Counsel:
One of them relates to special voting.
Justice
Atuguba: Okay.
Counsel:
MBT (ordinary) is the one that has total votes of 124 is that not so?
Witness:
It is, but a special voting should not have a code like this.
Counsel:
And the other two have a total vote of 292.
Witness:
Yes my lord.
Counsel (Pulling out a pink sheet) I have in my
hands the original pink sheet of the Juaso Court Hall for the special voting…(Justice
Atuguba interrupts).
Atuguba:
This MBT series, are they not exhibited to his affidavit?
Counsel:
Yes my lord.
Atuguba:
If they are why another process of tendering….?
Counsel:
Because the original has special voting written on it.
Justice
Atuguba: The original?
Counsel:
Yes my lord, but the photocopy from the petitioners has blotted that out. It’s
easy to see if you look at the two, my lord.
Justice
Atuguba: Okay, so...
Justice
Rose Owusu: The special voting has separate pink
sheet?
Counsel:
Some of them subsequently were used for the general voting on the 7th
of December, but the special voting took place on the 4th of December.
Justice
Owusu: Do they have a separate pink sheet (emphasizing the
word Separate).
Counsel:
Absolutely my lord.
Justice
Owusu: For special voting?
Counsel:
Definitely my lord, definitely because they are counted in the same way as the
general voting according to the CI. They are counted in the same way, but at
the collation centre, so they have pink sheets.
Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey - 3rd Petitioner
Counsel (Addison): My lords, we object to the tendering of this pink sheet. First of all, every writing on the face of this pink sheet is in blue ink, except the special voting, which has been done in red ink and it is of recent vintage. It has been put there after everything here has been filled out, that is why special voting does not appear on any of the three pink sheets we have tendered in this court. But my lords, we made a categorical statement in our affidavit in paragraph 59 that the witness swore as follows: That there were three polling stations where exclusive instances of the irregularities and malpractices polling stations with same polling codes and different results occurred and they can be found on the pink sheets. The combined effects of these infractions vitiated 687. Attached herewith and marked as exhibit MBT, MBT 1 and MBT 2 are photocopies of pink sheets of the polling stations where these infractions occurred.
Addison:
Here was a specific mention of these pink sheets, and what was the response of
the second respondent [EC], he responds in paragraph 14 (reading from the EC’s
response to the petitioners’ Affidavit):
Paragraph 36 to 68-blanket; 38 to 68 contains inconsistencies and are
denied. The second respondent says that the petitioners are fastening onto
errors committed in the completion of pink sheets by presiding officers that
did not benefit any particular candidate or affect the number of valid votes
cast at the polling stations. Not a single statement about this being special
voting -not a word of it! My lords, yesterday, counsel tendered through the
witness their own guide to election officers and directed the witness to read
page 7, paragraphs 2.2 and 2.3. Clearly stated there is no provision for pink
sheets…(He reads the paragraphs)…so my lords there it is; on the collation
forms, it does not say the pink sheets….(Counsel tries to interrupt).
Addison:
Please exercise some patience. My lords the EL 23 B is the presidential results
collation form which is done at the collation centre; completely different from
the pink sheets we are talking about, which is also the polling station
declaration of results. My lords, on form number 23 B, it is stated as number
one, Special voting results, and that is embossed on the form and that is where
the collation officer enters the results of the special voting after counting
it at the collation centre. This is what it is said in their own guidelines…
(Counsel for first respondent [President Mahama] Tony Lithur interjects).
Gang
Up
Tony
Lithur: My lords, is this an objection or an address?
Addison:
My lords, the pink sheets statement of polls and declaration of results for the
office of President is form number EL 21 B and the declaration which is the
signature side is form number EL 22 B, so quite clearly, this are completely
different forms from form number 23 B and 23 A which are collation station results.
My lords, we question the authenticity of this document that has just been
sprung on us.
Tony
Lithur: My lords, we have no objection [to the tendering of
the EC’s pink sheet], and I’m completely amazed that the official custodian of
a document comes to court and says that what you have there, I have the
original; there is no original anywhere. If there is any other body that
handles official election documents, they can say it….The official custodian
comes and say I have the original and I will like you to compare it with what
is there and the objection is that you doubt the authenticity? Those are
official documents and they are fundamentally relevant to this matter…how do we
know that it wasn’t blotted out in photocopying, how do we know that? It’s a serious
allegation …these are official original documents.
Addison:
My lords, I need to take an objection to this kind of [support from counsel for
first respondent on behalf of the counsel for the second respondent]. My lords,
the objection, my lords, I do not think the counsel for first respondent can
respond to the objection, in a way as if he is representing the second
respondent. My lords we need some directions in this respect, this has been
going on for some time, and we do not think that it’s proper…(Counsel for the
third respondent, Tsikata joins).
Tsatsu
Tsikata: The third respondent is a party to this suit and
material is being tendered in evidence, it is in relation to evidence in this
suit which affects the conduct of the case of the third respondent and indeed
other parties. It is therefore appropriate for parties to be heard in respect
of these matters….We have been joined as parties for good reason….
Addison:
My lords, I will like to bring to the notice of the court the fact that there
was no challenge to these exhibits; no challenge to the authenticity of these
exhibits which we exhibited, I have referred your lordships to the particular
paragraph in our affidavit. In their response, there was no challenge to it.
Now, second respondent is saying that there was some writing on it that somehow
did not appear on the ones that we served them with. Why did he not raise it in
his affidavit; we cannot conduct this case in this manner; springing these
things [pink sheets] at every turn.
Tony
Lithur: We have challenged a host of exhibits they have
brought to this court and the legitimate way of challenging it is by this
method. I can’t see any other way of challenging those exhibits. We have
indicated duplicated, quadruplicated sheets and those are exhibits in this
case, we have challenged them…so it is not correct to say that we have not
challenged the pink sheets that have been brought to this court….
Addison:
My lords are three people going to respond to one objection, what is your locus
in this (referring to Counsel for both first and third respondents)... (Justice
Atuguba intervenes).
Justice
Atuguba: Let’s look at the substance of the matter.
Addison:
No my lords this things are important, they keep on doing it.
Atuguba:
That doesn’t solve the problem at stake …. In this case, it will be most
unrealistic to compartmentalize…its one entire case; this way or that way. Now
let’s put it another way: Assuming this type of evidence goes and it is
something that affects the decision, are you saying that when they appeal, they
can’t take a point?...It affects them, they have an interest, as for that, they
are affected by the evidence being led and I think that is sufficient
standing….well, that’s my view, but if it is contentious, we can retire and
consider and come out and rule.
Bawumia’s
Polling Station
The court in a 6-3 majority decision dismissed
attempt by the EC counsel to tender in evidence pink sheet of the polling
station where Dr. Bawumia cast his ballot during the election.
The rejection followed an objection raised by Mr.
Addison over the tendering of the document by the EC since he said it had no
relevance to the issues in evidence.
He argued that no proper foundation was made in
tendering the pink sheet for Dr. Bawumia’s polling station and also said it
amounted to ‘ambush litigation’.
“We attached 11,842 pink sheets, the 2nd
respondent (EC) did not attach a single pink sheet as exhibit in their
affidavit and yet they want to rely on something that is not known to us per
the rules set for this trial.”
Mr. Addison said that the petitioners have not even
complained about Dr. Bawumia’s polling station and it is not part of the
polling stations being contested saying “I do not see the relevance here.”
However, Mr. Tony Lithur, counsel for President
Mahama supported the EC saying he did not oppose to Mr. Quarshie-Idun’s move.
Tsatsu Tsikata, counsel for the NDC also associated
himself with the EC, saying that it is
open to a party during cross-examination to produce document to surprise a
witness.
Mr. Quarshie-Idun also argued that Dr. Bawumia was
able to identify the pink sheet out of the 26,002 as the place he cast his
ballot and they wanted him to clarify the evidence he led.
Justices Atuguba, Sophia Adinyira and Vida
Akoto-Bamfo had ruled that the EC should tender Dr. Bawumia’s polling station
pink sheet while Justices Julius Ansah, Jones Victor Dotse, Rose C. Owusu,
Annin-Yeboah, Paul Baffoe-Bonnie and Sulley N. Gbadegbe ruled that the EC could
not tender the document.
Padded
Votes
Dr. Bawumia told the court that padding of votes as
they alleged in the petition came in the form of over-voting, voting without
biometric verification or duplicate serial numbers.
The EC counsel then pulled out a document which he
said was which indicated how the commission announced the results but Mr.
Addison objected and said Dr. Bawumia could not testify on a document the
petitioners did not generate.
Justice Atuguba then asked Mr. Quarshie-Idun to bring
the primary pink sheets that were used to tabulate the figures that was being
sought to be tendered.
The court said it was ‘provisionally’ accepting the
document on condition that the EC would supply the court with the original
copy.
Throughout the cross-examination, any error that occurred
during the election has been described by Mr. Quarshie-Idun and Tony Lithur as ‘trans-positional
or clerical errors’ and ‘administrative errors’ respectively but Dr. Bawumia has
always parried all those suggestions.
EC
Counsel: I suggest to you that out of the 26,002 you could
provide only one polling station which we say is trans-positional or clerical
error?
Witness:
We have supplied 11,138 pink sheets of polling stations where we have detected discrepancies
in the figures declared by the 2nd respondent.
As counsel persistently put it to Dr. Bawumia that the
petitioners did not raise any protest on the counting day, the witness said “we
complained to the chairman of the 2nd respondent and he told us to
go to court.”
“My Lords there are many ways to kill a cat,” he
added drawing spontaneous laughter in the courtroom and said that most of the
votes that are under contention inure to the benefit of President Mahama.
Justice Baffoe-Bonnie even jokingly asked Dr.
Bawumia to acknowledge that somebody (NDC Chairman Dr. Kwabena Adjei) owns the
patent of the catch phrase.
Dr. Bawumia disagreed with the EC that the
14,158,890 voter register used in announcing the presidential results was an
error and pointed out that there was a difference between the total number of
votes in declaring the presidential and parliamentary votes put together.
Disability
Issue
Counsel:
Under cross examination, you insisted that biometric registration was only
fingerprint, is that not correct?
Witness:
This is what the CI 75 defines it as… (Counsel interrupts).
Counsel:
In your evidence in Chief, you insisted that biometric registration is only
fingerprint
Witness:
It does, but the law also makes exceptions for people without fingers or people
whose fingers could not be captured. That is in the law, but the equipment is
for fingerprint verification.
Counsel:
The photograph is also part of the details in the biometric register?
Witness:
Yes my lord.
Counsel:
And so are the other details of the registrant; the person being registered.
Witness:
Yes my lord.
Counsel:
So there are data other than the finger print that will enable you to be
biometrically verified?
Witness:
Yes my lord, on the register there are data that is capturing people who would
be identified by their face only so in the register under their names, the
initials “F.O” appear. The total register that we have looked at, there are
3,196 such people and they are distributed across three regions in Ghana: You
have 2,657 in the Volta Region, 170 in….. (Interrupted by a counsel who was
astounded by the witness’ ability to commit those figures to memory).
Counsel:
My lord, I respectfully submit that the answers that he is giving, he is going
beyond the question that I gave my lord…
Witness:
No, not at all, I’m just fully giving the answers knowing the data that
supports the question and the answer therefore….
Sitting continues on Monday April 29, 2013 after
counsel called for a break.
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