Posted on:
www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Tuesday,
November 22, 2016
It is turning out that many soldiers serving on peacekeeping
missions abroad are reluctant to exercise their franchise in the impending
general election.
A few of them are said to have reluctantly given their voter ID
particulars to the military hierarchy for onward transmission to the Electoral
Commission (EC) to prepare the special voting register.
According to information, they have been reluctant because during
the 2012 general election, the military hierarchy reportedly changed their
proxies and made other people to vote for them instead.
DAILY
GUIDE understands
that about 80% of the soldiers did not respond to signals sent to the various
units on peacekeeping to submit details of their voter identity cards because
of the way they were denied the right to select their preferred candidates in
2012.
“The authorities selected the proxies and rejected the people they
asked to represent them on voting day. What is the guarantee that those picked
will vote for the preferred candidates of the soldiers?” a source queried,
adding, “All these are happening because of one person’s unbridled quest for
power.”
Election
Ambulances
There are also reports that about 60 ambulances have been assembled
at the Air Force Base, Burma Camp, Accra, and they are reportedly going to be
used for special operation on election day.
Member of Parliament (MP) for Assin Central, Kennedy Ohene Agyepong,
made the revelation recently when he alleged that the ambulances were going to
be used to smuggle stuffed ballot boxes and other election-related materials by
the NDC in collaboration with the military on voting day, adding that it forms
part of the ruling party’s agenda to re-elect President Mahama by any means.
Strange Request
At a time when some soldiers are said to have refused to submit
their voter particulars for the special voting exercise on December 1, the
police administration is reportedly in a behind-the-scenes move with the EC to
introduce more names into the already-compiled special voter list, raising
questions about the commission’s neutrality.
The move has already raised eyebrows and further put in doubt the
EC’s neutrality ahead of the December 7 crucial elections since the political
parties are said not to have been consulted about the intended action.
With only 10 days to the special voting and with the EC already
releasing 65,000 people as eligible special voters to all the parties, the police
administration has written to the commission to key in more names of recruits
in training to enable them to exercise their franchise in the special exercise.
The recruits are said to be close to 2,000 and are coming from
police training institutions in Pwalugu (Upper East), Ho (Volta), Koforidua
(Eastern), Kumasi (Ashanti) and Accra (Greater Accra).
The IGP, in a wire message sent to police formations - a copy of
which is available to DAILY GUIDE - asked commanders to
liaise with EC district officers to virtually compile a new list of special
voters – when the exercise had long been closed - and the request when granted,
would be a clear breach of C.I. 94, the instrument being used to regulate the
December 7 general election.
Parties
Stranded
Clearly, it is being done at the blind side of the political parties
because the EC released a list of 65,000 possible voters for the special
voting.
Head of Communication at the EC, Eric Kofi Dzakpasu, recently gave
the breakdown as 871 for media personnel, 23,567 for security services and
40,563 election officials, and as far as C.I. 94 is concerned, the application
to be entered on the list of special voters has been determined and concluded
as far back as October 28, 2016 - 42 days to polls day.
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