Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Wednesday,
November 11, 2015
Some Ghanaian residents in the
United Kingdom have embarked on a massive demonstration in London aimed at piling
pressure on the Electoral Commission (EC) to prepare a new Biometric Voters’
Register.
They ended the demonstration at
the No 10, Downing Street, Westminster, where UK Prime Minister David Cameron
lives on, and presented a petition to the British leader.
A news statement issued in London
by organisers said apart from Prime Minister David Cameron’s office, they sent
similar letters to the British Parliament, the Commonwealth Secretariat, the
United Nations UK representative, the European Union, the German Chancellor
through the German Ambassador in the UK, the Pope through the Vatican Pronuncio,
the Archbishop of Canterbury, and several European governments through their
Embassies.
According to the organisers,
they also presented exhibits of images of multiple Ghanaian registrants, cross
border registrants of mainly Togolese nationals, a few of Burkina and Ivorian
nationalities, as well as images of police brutalities recently visited on
peaceful demonstrators against the existing flawed register in Accra.
The demonstrators, the release
said, held placards, some of which read:
Election 2016 Under Threat; Ghana Elections Is for Ghanaians; New Voters
Register Now; NDC and EC in Bed; There Will Not Be Another Court Case; and No
Fair Elections No Peace among others.
Concerns
They were particularly incensed
by new EC Chairperson Charlotte Osei’s claim that Ghana’s security might be
threatened by any move to compile a new register and wondered if the EC was now
a security intelligence agency.
The petition, signed by Kwaku
Abrefa Damoa, said “We are concerned Ghanaians living in the United Kingdom, and
we do hereby seek your indulgence, and the support of your government, in
acting in solidarity with our compatriots in Ghana, who have stood up against
the use of a flawed voters’ register in the December 2016 General and
Presidential elections.”
“We are dismayed with happenings
and mis-happenings currently underscoring our Ghanaian democracy. We sense and
feel serious mischievous simmering forebodings, currently in zygote stage of
development, that if not earlier dealt with, can result in internecine carnage
in Ghana within the next 12 months, and which requires immediate attention from
our international partners and development communities, whom we trust are in a
better position to forefend it,” they added.
The statement further said: “Our
concerns have all been outlined in detail in an attached preamble, followed by
our request in the form of a petition. Attached with our petition are sample
exhibits of double and multiple registration which have been discovered in tens
of thousands, cross border registrants from neighbouring Togo, Burkina and the
Ivory Coast, also in several hundred thousands, who are transported or allowed
into Ghana by the ruling National Democratic Congress party as ‘voting mercenaries’
during general elections to vote for them, and also Ghana police brutalities on
peaceful demonstrators against the flawed register.”
The concerned Ghanaians said
they wanted the UK Premier to use his “high high powered international
influence and authority to directly intervene to forestall any future bloody
conflict,” and also “support the position that calls for a new, credible, and
transparent voters’ register in Ghana.”
They also want the international
community “to support the people of Ghana in seeking justice in our electoral
processes, and ultimately lasting peace and stability, by not necessarily
maintaining the current voters’ register as this may backfire in future into
mayhem.”
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