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Showing posts with label Ghana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ghana. Show all posts

Ghana’s Democracy Is Not There Yet, E-Voting May Get Us There

Monday, December 7, 2009


Press Statement by the Danquah Institute

"It's not he who casts the votes that matters -- but he who counts the votes." -Joseph Stalin

President Obama’s visit to Ghana earlier this year, gave us all as Ghanaians deep pride in our country and in our international reputation. That our small West African nation was chosen as the first in the whole continent to be so honoured since Obama took power was the result of an achievement we have built as a whole people since 1992 in not only the reborn of democracy but successfully warring off the infant mortality that has put paid to too many of our continental contemporaries.

We are right to feel proud of this achievement and the rest of the world is right to pay tribute to it. The world does recognise that the importance of our successful multi-party democracy reaches far beyond the 23 million people within our borders. It has profound significance for other African nations whose nascent democracies might yet falter and fall. Here, we have succeeded in holding five consecutive elections in the Fourth Republic and we have succeeded in changing the reigns of power from one political party to another twice now.

But whilst we might be ahead of the pack, whilst we might lead the continent in the march towards democracy as we did 52 years ago, we still have a long road ahead of us and the future of our democracy is by no means certain.

Those of us present in Ghana, those of us involved in last December’s election, those of us who were glued to our radio stations by fear, those of us privy to the goings-on in and around the Electoral Commission, the political parties and in trouble-spots across the regions, we cannot forget how excruciatingly close Ghana came to the kind of election break-down and violence we saw in Kenya and Zimbabwe. And nor should we.

Today is exactly one year since Ghanaians went to the polls to vote on both presidential and parliamentary candidates. In looking back, we must also look ahead and provide the attention, do what is required and seek the support we need to ensure that our 2012 elections do not again bring us so perilously close to the brink of violence. Those of us at the Danquah Institute fear that without significant improvements to the credibility of Ghana’s electoral process, December 2012 could potentially turn Ghana into a war zone.

With the well-founded concerns about the reliability of our electoral register last year, combined with attempts by certain forces to cast doubts about the fairness of the polls before they had even closed, and fears about the alleged involvement of the security forces in efforts to ready the country to reject a verdict deemed unacceptable, Ghana’s election was not quite the golden example it has been hailed as (or that we wish it had been).

The main political opposition party (led by Prof. John Evans Atta Mills) was so ruthlessly efficient in developing in the minds of their hardcore supporters and also in that of some security personnel that the Electoral Commission and the ruling party were conspiring to rig the election results.

Ghana’s 2008 presidential election held the potential to deliver violence instead of peace, anarchy instead of order, regression instead of progression. A military takeover could not even have been ruled out, a point people privy to national security intelligence reports would find difficult to challenge.

There is no guarantee that the main opposition party today will not for 2012 assume the kind of dangerously militant posture and speak the kind of language that got Ghana so close to a Kenya. We cannot rule out the possibility of today’s main opposition party assuming an even more militant posture in 2012 than what struck awe and fear in many Ghanaians and international diplomats and observers last December. So, what happens if unlike 2008, the Opposition does not get its electoral way after the 2012 results are announced? What if incumbency triumphs and prevails?

To avoid this in 2012 we need to work much harder to build public faith and confidence in the nuts and bolts of our election machinery that, if properly organised, can ensure no room for inflammatory accusations of bias or tampering. We need to deny the rig-sayers the oxygen of legitimacy, with which to breathe fear, anger, hatred and venom into the lungs of the Ghanaian electorate. We should take note that the human instruments of large scale violence are not just lawless hooligans and mercenaries.

In 2008, the rig-sayers were helped by the admission on the part of the Electoral Commissioner that the voter register was massively bloated. South Africa, with a population of 47 million people, counted a voter population of some 18 million. Ghana, with a population of less than 23 million people, said it had a voter population of some 10 million. Not only does a bloated register give political parties the opportunity to rig elections, they also give rig-sayers the legitimacy to say to their supporters and sympathisers that they have been cheated and that they should stand up and resist – whether the claim is true or false. This is what characterised last year’s general elections in Ghana and Ghana, we dare say, was probably only saved by the fact that the results were called for the main opposition party and not for the incumbent government. How then do we secure the legitimacy of not only the electoral process in Ghana but also the victory of an incumbent government?

This is of particular importance in countries like ours where a virtual two-party system can produce victories based on razor-thin majorities, where a relatively small amount of rigging has the potential to dramatically change the result. Ghana is far from securing its current position as a model democracy for the majority of the continent. We need to do so and that process must begin now.

We have chosen this day to announce to the country that on February 8-9, 2010 the Danquah Institute in collaboration with other civil society groups and political parties will host a seminar on ‘The Viability of E-Voting for Ghana 2012.’

There is a growing popular view that if we had e-voting in Ghana in 2012, not only would we assure our continued position as a beacon of democracy and hope for the continent, but we would also lead the way yet again in demonstrating a method and a means by which to overcome one of the major hurdles facing young democracies in Africa – manipulation of the votes and accompanying mistrust of the result.

The sum total of international research shows that e-voting offers potential for voting and election management that is an improvement over ballot paper voting or non-biometric voter registration. For Ghana, that technological leap could be the defence weapon against the explosion of electoral violence in the future, which could ultimately deal a fatal blow to the entire democratic experiment here in Ghana and with continental consequences.

On Tuesday, 12 May, a forum was organised by the Electoral Commission in collaboration with KAB Governance Consult and the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), under the theme “Safeguarding the Integrity of the Ballot Project”. What could only be described as a historical commitment was made that day. At the gathering, Ghana’s main political parties endorsed the adoption of a Biometric Voter Register as the best way to guarantee a credible database of eligible voters. In a communiqué, all the seven political parties (including NDC, NPP, CPP, PNC and DFP) in attendance, in their endorsement stated: “This is very necessary to deal authoritatively with practices of multiple voting and impersonation that tend to undermine public confidence in declared election results.”

There is a very strong case for biometric-based credentialing solution for Ghana’s Voter Registration Project. Not long after the 2008 elections, the Danquah Institute started to advocate for the consideration of e-voting. Shortly afterwards, the Chairman of Ghana’s Electoral Commission, Dr. Kwadwo Afari-Gyan, stated that the EC was looking to adopt a biometric system of registering voters prior to the next polls, but will stop short of implementing electronic voting for election day.

Dr Afari-Gyan stated in response to a question by the Executive Director of the Danquah Institute: “The Commission is considering biometric registration of voters but as for biometric voting, I don't think the country is ready for it. If we do, I believe some people will start asking whether the Castle has not programmed the machines with some figures to their advantage.”


Again, on Wednesday, 18 March, 2009, Dr. Afari-Gyan announced on radio that a completely new voter registration exercise will take place to compile a new credible database for the 2012 general elections. The exercise will employ the best of technologies, including the use of biometric registration to beat fraudsters who attempt to exploit the voting exercise to their advantage.

During a workshop organised by the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) in October for some selected civil society organisations, leaders of political parties, religious leaders, journalists and development partners on the theme, “The survival of multi-party democracy and politics of accommodation and tolerance”, a Deputy Chairman of the Electoral Commission (EC), Mr David Adenze Kanga, expressed, what we see as a very worrying scepticism about the viability of Ghana adopting a biometric voter registration system and an electronic voting system.

The Daily Graphic of Thursday, 15 October read: “Regarding the biometric system of registration and voting, Mr Kanga said the country should tread cautiously concerning voting, in order not to throw off the transparency tenets in the present voting system.”

He explained that “with the electronic voting, the electorate would be given receipts from the machine indicating that they had voted and after the process the machine would indicate how many votes each candidate received. With this process against the backdrop of the fact that the Ghanaian electorate was accustomed to the counting of ballots in their presence, the ordinary voter would not appreciate how the machine arrived at the final figures for each candidate.”


We cannot, as a nation, dismiss without the benefit of a full domestic interrogation the viability of electronic voting. Just as allegations such as the EC conspiring with the incumbent government in 2008 to rig the elections did not perturb the Commission, so should we not allow predictable allegations such as “the Castle programming the machines” to stop us from considering the suitability of that option. Ghana has developed a matured tradition of post-elections self-assessment, which often leads to the introduction of enhanced security features to the electoral system, for example, transparent ballot boxes in 1996, and photo voter IDs in 2000. Surely, this is not the time to sidestep that tradition.

Though, there is talk of biometric voter registration or electronic voting as possibly the way forward, this prospect is being allowed to be easily shot down by the cynics because we are yet to devote enough intellectual resources to interrogate seriously this modern system of voting and its viability in Ghana. The fundamental question to be addressed before 2012 is how do we protect the integrity of the elections from the point of voter registration to the moment of winner certification? Linked to this is the question, what are the factors that influence public confidence in elections?

In 2008, both the rulling New Patriotic Party (NPP) and main opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), at the time, accused each other of encouraging non-citizens, ghost names, as well as underage Ghanaians to register ahead of the elections. Speculations about and evidence of a bloated voter register went very far to undermine the credibility of the December vote. The possibility of a bloated register also fed steroids to the macho men of electoral fraud and violence, since a bloated voter register allows the opportunity to add up numbers and intimidate your opponents, ironically even as a defence strategy against an assumed threat of fraud against the intimidator’s political party.

In the words of Dr. Afari Gyan concerning Ghana’s 2008 voters’ register:
“If our population is indeed 22 million, then perhaps 13 million people on our register would be statistically unacceptable by world standards. If that is the case, then it may mean that there is something wrong with our register.”

Political parties exploited public admission and knowledge of a bloated voter register to feed their fears and trumpet allegations that there was a plot by a particular party or between an opposing party and electoral officers to rig the December polls. This gained legitimacy in the minds of several Ghanaians, including, perhaps, most dangerously some members in the security agencies. Thus, the ‘battlefield’ for a possible rejection of the results had been provided. We cannot as a nation continue with the undemocratic phenomenon where the balance of victory in our elections will be determined by how well a political party thinks it can manipulate results in its electoral strongholds.

The EC is yet to explain to Ghanaians how come after four previous presidential elections, 2008 registered the highest number of spoilt ballots (in both percentages and actual numbers), when the same system was used last year. With an election that less than 40,000 votes decided who swore the presidential oath on January 7, having over 200,000 spoilt ballots deserves more than a cursory comment. There is no such thing anywhere in the world as perfect election arrangement, but it has been shown elsewhere that electronic voting stops ballot box stuffing, ballot box theft and destruction, multiple voting, reduces spoilt ballots to zero, and saves the EC in printing, storage, staff costs, etc. Some jurisdictions have even maintained paper ballot in addition to electronic voting to serve as a counter-check in case of a dispute, thereby responding adequately to the very concerns raised by Mr. Kanga above. It is worth examining all the various options of e-voting, their security and usability features and their cost-benefit dimensions in order to make a responsible and informed decision on the way forward for Ghana’s electoral process.

In Ghana’s volatile and charged partisan political environment, it is extremely important that we have a trusted election process, where elections will be regarded as reasonably fair, even by the losing side. If India, with more illiterates than the entire population of Ghana, with 714 million registered voters, 828,000 polling stations, and many polling stations in areas with no electricity, could deploy one million battery-powered Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs) for an election with more than 100 political parties and not register any notable voice of protest, then Ghana would do herself a great disservice by refusing to examine constructively the viability of an electronic electoral process.

The spectre of hundreds of very angry young men wielding cutlasses at the vicinity of the EC headquarters last December should at least remind us of how close Ghana got to become another Kenya instead of the black star of hope that it is today that Africa can indeed hold ‘normal’ general elections. The platform on which Ghana has been receiving global applause for its performance at the theatre of elections is fragile. We need not allow our weaknesses to be deafened by the din of global praise. We must get to work now and tighten the nuts and bolts of our electoral process. E-voting may well turn out to be the best way to securing the future of Africa’s fledgling democracies and, if so, Ghana should not miss this self-serving opportunity to blaze once again the continental trail. Democracy must succeed in Ghana and biometric registration and e-voting may well provide us with the warranty for democracy’s enduring success.

Thank you

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Afari-Gyan to address Nigeria’s senators’ retreat on reform

Monday, September 28, 2009


Nigeria’s Senate ad-hoc committee reviewing the country’s 1999 Constitution has invited the chairman of the Electoral Commission of Ghana, Dr. Kwadwo Afari-Gyan, to speak at its forthcoming retreat in Kaduna State.

Also expected to speak at the forum, which will be attended by the Speakers of the 36 states’ houses of assembly, is the chairperson of the defunct Electoral Reform Committee and former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Muhammadu Uwais.

The retreat will hold on October 8 and 9, 2009.

A statement, on Sunday, in Abuja, by the Office of the Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, who also heads the 44-member committee, said Dr. Afari-Gyan’s presentation is titled “Designing Electoral Laws for Effective Election Management: Global and Regional Perspective.”

The topic, according to the statement, will touch on the legal framework for elections, constitutional courts and independent candidacy among other issues.

“As you might be aware, Dr Afari-Gyan is the Chairman of the Ghanaian Electoral Commission and has a good knowledge of international standards and best practices on electoral matters as well as vast experience in election management,” the statement by Paul Odenyi, Mr Ekweremadu’s aide, said. Mr. Odenyi also said the Electoral Commission boss has confirmed his coming.

Dr. Afari-Gyan-led Ghana’s election commission has successfully organized four general elections in the last 11 years. The elections are those that brought former President Jerry Rawlings into his last term in office, brought former President John Kufuor to power as well as his re-election. He also led the body in the election that brought the incumbent, John Atta Mills, to power early this year.

Mr. Afari-Gyan was a member of the ECOWAS fact-finding team on the 2007 general elections in Nigeria.

The six-member team, led by former Gambian President Dauda Jawara, appraised the preparations for the April 2007 election which brought President Umaru Yar’Adua to power.

International support
Mr. Ekweremadu had, earlier this month, said that the ad-hoc committee would seek technical assistance from international organizations in the task of reviewing the 1999 Constitution.

Already, the committee has written to America’s National Democratic Institute for assistance.

The decision is aimed at bringing in an international expert in the field of constitution and electoral laws as well as electoral management.

The Senate ad-hoc committee is embarking on a separate amendment process from that of the House which is chaired by Deputy Speaker Usman Nafada.

Both committees had disagreed over the position of Mr. Nafada in the National Assembly Joint Committee on the Review of the 1999 Constitution.

The House committee has already conducted public hearings into the six bills forwarded to the National Assembly by President Umaru Yar’Adua.

Its Senate counterpart, it was learnt, will organize hearings on the bills after the retreat in Kaduna.


Source: Next.com

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Can Ghana trounce the bad news?

Friday, May 29, 2009

Supporters of Convention People"s Party Presidential (l), ruling party ballon, painted supporters of the opposition NDC

By Komla Dumor 
BBC News, Accra

Considering all the bad news about recent elections in Africa - rigging, violence and bogus power-sharing agreements - one may be tempted to expect more of the same from Ghana.

The West African nation is going to the polls on Sunday to elect a new president and 240 members of the parliament.

 A mouth-watering windfall of billions of dollars awaits the next administration 

Its western neighbour Ivory Coast has yet again postponed its election to 2009 because of difficulties in compiling a national register.

Nigeria, to the east, held one of the continent's most badly flawed elections in April last year.

Rigging was rife and the legitimacy of President Umaru Yar'Adua and several governors is still being challenged in court.

Violence ripped through Kenya after the ruling party proclaimed a dubious electoral victory last December.

And Zimbabwe continues to spiral into an abyss of poverty and disease as the ruling party refuses to relinquish its grip on the state in spite of a power-sharing arrangement.

Highly contentious

So why should Ghana be any different?

The capacity for violence and electoral malpractice exists in Ghana, as it does in any country in the world.

Election posters of John Atta Mills and Nana Akufo-Addo

But democracy is still making progress in Africa and there have been successful elections in Liberia and Sierra Leone, Senegal and Zambia to name a few.

That is not to say the run-up to this election in Ghana has not been contentious.

Ghana has recently discovered oil: a mouth-watering windfall of billions of dollars awaits the next administration.

Though not on the scale of Nigeria or Angola, oil has the potential to transform this nation of 20 million people.

But there is good reason to be cautiously optimistic.

Ghana was sub-Saharan Africa's first nation to achieve independence, from the UK in 1957.

In post-independent Ghana, civilian rule was truncated repeatedly by a series of military coups until a return to democracy in 1992.

For the past 16 years, things seem to have gone well for Ghana's democracy.

'Skirt and blouse voting'

There are multiple political parties and the two main ones have both held the reins of government.

 Both parties have tasted victory and defeat at the feet of the Ghanaian electorate 

The ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP) has been in power for the past eight years under the leadership of President John Kufuor.

The NPP has chosen former Foreign Minister Akufo-Addo for its ticket.

Before he became president in 2000 and won re-election in 2004, Mr Kufuor's NPP lost two polls - in 1992 and 1996 - to Flight Lieutenant Jerry Rawling's National Democratic Congress (NDC) which is fielding his former Vice-President John Atta Mills as its flagbearer.

Both parties have tasted victory and defeat at the feet of the Ghanaian electorate.

Unlike the case of Kenya, for example, both parties have considerable support that cuts across ethnic divisions in all 10 regions of the nation.

Though it is true that the ruling NPP dominates in the Ashanti Region of the country and the NDC has massive support in the Volta Region, Ghanaians have been known to vote against candidates who share their ethnicity but do not share their political values.

A phenomenon Ghanaians themselves call "skirt and blouse voting".

Intermarriage

In fact, one factor attributed to the defeat of Mr Atta Mills in 2000 and 2004 was the refusal of voters from the Central Region, from where he hails, to vote for him.

A vendor selling papers in Ghana
Ghana has a vibrant press and scores of radio stations

Several members of parliament in Ghana have been elected by constituencies who voted for a different party in the presidential race.

Years of intermarriage have lessened the impact of ethnicity, even though it still plays a role in the politics of Ghana.

Another factor that suggests that Ghana democracy is sustainable is the Electoral Commission of Ghana.

It has been under the leadership of Kwadwo Afari-Djan for the past four elections.

He was appointed by the then-incumbent NDC government and oversaw two of their electoral victories.

He was retained by the current NPP administration and has supervised electoral victories and defeats under their incumbency.

Thus the electoral commission has both the appearance and credibility of an organisation that is able to conduct free and fair elections.

Free media

Perhaps of equal importance is the media. Ghana has one of the freest medias in Africa.

Girl selling fish
People hope that future oil revenue will bring improvements to all

There are scores of radio stations dotted around the country.

During elections radio stations like the capital's JoyFM dispatch staff armed with mobile phones around the country.

The correspondent gives continuous live updates and reports by mobile phone to their media "election headquarters".

Once results are collated at the constituency, in the presence of party officials and electoral officers, the radio stations rapidly compile the results, broadcast them and a clear picture of the outcome is available within 24 hours.

The process has become too fast for old-fashioned election shenanigans.

JoyFM takes this a step further and publishes the results on the internet, thereby making it virtually impossible for a government to fiddle with results during a deliberate delay in their release by a government-controlled electoral commission as is the case elsewhere in Africa.

Politically aware

The only difference between the coverage on Ghanaian radio stations and those in first-world countries is the technology but in this case a simple mobile phone and basic web publishing software arguably works even better.

 Ghanaians have hosted refugees... do not want to end up as unwanted guests in neighbouring countries 
This not to say problems do not exist.

There have been cases of some individuals attempting to register more than once.

And it is clear that both the ruling NPP and NDC exploit any advantage they have to win.

But Ghanaians have clearly become too politically aware to be taken for a ride.

All the presidential candidates participated in a number of nationally telecast debates, fielding questions on healthcare, education and the economy.

The political process is not foolproof and democracies can disintegrate under the pressure of politics but Sunday may be the final consolidation of the basic structures of democracy for Ghana.

Ghanaians have made it clear that they prefer democracy with all its flaws to military rule or anarchy.

Ghana has hosted refugees from civil crises in Liberia and Sierra Leone and Ghanaians do not want to end up as unwanted guests in neighbouring countries.

However more work needs to be done for ordinary citizens to feel the impact of democracy's dividends where it counts most - in an improvement in their living standards.

Source:bbc.co.uk

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President Barack Obama to visit Ghana

Saturday, May 16, 2009


Click for Full Size
President Barack Obama
If the President does come to Africa it will be a deviation from the past US administrations who wait till the end of their term before visiting. The choice of Ghana is a message to the despotic regimes in Libya, Egypt, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea and the others that they stand to loose American friendship if they don't change their ways.

President Obama coming to Ghana is a victory for democracy and a reward for a nation that chose to change its leadership through free, fair and transparent elections. 

Ghanaians have decided to opt for democracy as a path to achieving economic development and prosperity and need to be supported. I will therefore like to inform President Obama that trade and investment is what Ghana need at this point not aid. President Obama should use his 'home coming' to urge leaders in the continent to embrace democracy and adhere to rule of law, freedoms and rights. 

He should also let them understand that decades of corruption, embezzlement, dictatorship, scant accountability, economic failures and incompetence leadership must give way to the opposite. They must do more to combat poverty instead of accumulating power to oppress the masses. 
President Barrack Obama of the United States of America will pay a state visit to Ghana from Friday, July 10 to Saturday July 11, 2009.

He will be accompanied by his wife, Mrs. Michelle Obama and other government officials. 
This was contained in a statement issued to the Ghana News Agency by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration in Accra on Saturday.

During his visit, President Obama will hold bilateral talks with his Ghanaian counterpart, President John Evans Atta Mills, aimed at strengthening the fraternal relations existing between the two countries.

The US President and his delegation will also visit the Cape Coast Castle.
GNA

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