Tag: voters register

  • Viral video showing Voters Register in white truck not official  – EC

    Viral video showing Voters Register in white truck not official – EC

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has refuted claims made in a viral video circulating on social media, which depicted a Voters Register for Ahafo Ano 1 and 2 being transported in a white pick-up truck along with other registers.

    In an official statement released on Wednesday, the EC clarified that the register shown in the video is not one of their official records. The Commission pointed out that their registers are printed in black and white, contrary to the colored format seen in the footage.

    Additionally, the EC explained that the final version of the register provided to political parties is printed by those parties themselves and used by their agents. They also stated that the vehicle featured in the video does not belong to the Commission.

    The EC has strongly advised the public to disregard the video, emphasizing that it was created to spread confusion and erode trust in the Commission’s operations.

    Samuel Tettey, the EC’s Deputy Chairman, has called on the police to investigate the incident, noting that the truck’s registration number visible in the video may assist in the probe.

    Below is the full statement

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has taken note of a video circulating on social media which shows a copy of a supposed Voters Register for Ahafo Ano 1 and 2 being transported in a white pick-up truck together with other registers.

    The Voters Register shown in the video is not that of the EC. The Commission’s registers are black and white and not coloured as shown in the video.

    It is important to note that the Commission provides the Final Register to the Political Parties. As has been the practice, the Political Parties also print the Final Register for their Agents. Additionally, it is instructive to note that the truck in the video does not belong to the Commission.

    The Public should disregard the said video. It is calculated to create suspicion and mistrust for the Commission and its work.

    We urge the Police to investigate this matter. The registration number of the pick-up truck, which is visible in the video, should be able to assist the Police in their investigations.

    Thank you.

    Samuel Tettey Deputy Chairman, Operations.

  • Certified Voters Register released to political parties

    Certified Voters Register released to political parties

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has released the Certified Voters Register to all registered political parties and independent presidential candidates, providing essential electoral data ahead of the December elections.

    This distribution, conducted in line with Sub-Regulation 4 of Regulation 27 of Constitutional Instrument (C.I.) 91, aims to ensure transparency and preparedness for the upcoming vote.

    The Certified Voters Register, shared as a soft copy on external hard drives, includes not only the Valid Voters Register but also several supplementary lists: the Exceptions List, the Multiples List, the Transferred Voters List, the Absent Voters List, the Manual Verification List, the Proxy Voters List, and the Special Voters List. This comprehensive package offers parties and candidates a full overview of voter data, supporting a smoother election process.

    During the briefing on Wednesday, November 6, the National Democratic Congress (NDC) requested a statistical summary of the various lists. While not legally obligated to do so, the EC agreed to fulfill this request as a gesture of transparency. Although the summaries were generated regionally, the EC is expected to provide the parties with the data soon.

    The EC highlighted that this is the first time any party has requested such a breakdown; since 1992, it has traditionally provided only the Certified Voters Register without additional summaries. The Commission further emphasized its commitment to timely processes, noting that it had met its promise to deliver the Certified Voters Register by the first week of November, as outlined during the Inter-Party Advisory Committee (IPAC) meeting on October 15, 2024.

    The EC assured stakeholders of the credibility of the Certified Voters Register and urged public support for its efforts to conduct a free, fair, and transparent election in December.

  • Voters register to be re-exhibited online from October 15 to 19

    Voters register to be re-exhibited online from October 15 to 19

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has announced the online re-exhibition of the 2024 Provisional Voter Register (PVR), scheduled to take place from Tuesday, October 15 to Sunday, October 19, 2024.

    This move follows the EC’s commitment to re-exhibit the revised register during a Special Inter-Party Advisory Committee (IPAC) meeting held on October 1.

    The re-exhibition aims to provide registered voters with an opportunity to verify their details and report any discrepancies, in response to concerns raised by the National Democratic Congress (NDC) regarding the accuracy of the register. By ensuring that all registered voters have accurate information, the EC hopes to facilitate a smoother voting process ahead of the 2024 General Elections.

    In a statement issued on Monday, October 14, the EC stated: “The Electoral Commission wishes to announce for the information of the General Public, Registered Voters and all Stakeholders, that Re-Exhibition of the Provisional Voters Register (PVR) will commence on Tuesday, 15th October and end on Saturday, 19th October, 2024.”

    Starting Tuesday, voters can check their details using the shortcode 71151# free of charge or by visiting the EC’s website (https://ec.gov.gh). Voters using the website are instructed to click on the pop-up link at the bottom-right corner of the screen and enter their 10-digit Voter ID number to access their registration details.

    The EC also urged the public to report any discrepancies to its District Offices for correction during the re-exhibition period. “The Public should note that any discrepancies identified must be reported to the District Office of the Commission where they are registered voters for correction.

    Once the Re-Exhibition Exercise ends on Saturday, 19th October, voters will still be able to check their details Online but CANNOT request for correction of their details,” the statement added.

    In addition, political parties are encouraged to use the official Template provided by the EC to report any inconsistencies identified during the re-exhibition process.

    By taking these steps, the EC is working to address concerns and ensure that the voter register is accurate and up to date ahead of the 2024 elections.

  • EC holds IPAC meeting today to discuss voters register

    EC holds IPAC meeting today to discuss voters register

    The Electoral Commission (EC) will hold an Inter-Party Advisory Committee (IPAC) meeting today, Tuesday, October 1, 2024.

    The meeting is intended to provide political parties with an opportunity to present any findings they may have regarding the Provisional Voters Register (PVR). It will also allow the EC to present an updated report on issues it has resolved with the PVR.

    In a move to keep citizens informed, the Commission has announced that the meeting will be covered live, as part of its ongoing efforts to build trust in its processes. The EC is optimistic that feedback from political parties will help further strengthen the 2024 Voters Register.

    This meeting follows persistent pressure on the EC to conduct a forensic audit of the Voters Register, after the National Democratic Congress (NDC) raised concerns about the integrity of the register, particularly regarding the transfer of voters without their consent.

    However, the EC has maintained that calls for a forensic audit of the Provisional Voters Register are premature, as the Commission has yet to exhaust its established procedures for cleaning the register.

    In response to a petition by the NDC, the Commission stated that it had largely resolved the discrepancies identified in the register and would conduct an online exhibition before the final version is released.

    In a letter to the NDC, signed by EC Chairperson Mrs. Jean Mensa, the Commission explained, “The exhibition of the Provisional Voters Register allows for inspection and correction of discrepancies.” It also noted that the Commission’s District Officers are currently implementing the decisions and recommendations of the District Registration Review Officers.

    Today’s IPAC meeting is expected to play a key role in addressing any remaining concerns and ensuring the integrity of the voters register ahead of the 2024 elections.

  • EC to submit full voters register to political parties, other groups on Oct. 1

    EC to submit full voters register to political parties, other groups on Oct. 1

    A Deputy Chairman of the Electoral Commission (EC), Dr. Bossman Asare, has announced that the commission will present the complete voter’s register to political parties and other relevant stakeholders on Tuesday, October 1, 2024.

    This decision comes amid escalating concerns regarding the accuracy and credibility of the provisional voter’s register ahead of the 2024 elections.

    Speaking on JoyNews’ Newsfile program on Saturday, September 28, Dr. Asare emphasized that presenting the register to political parties and civil society groups is part of the Commission’s efforts to build trust and ensure accountability.

    He stated that the upcoming meeting will offer stakeholders the chance to review the register, voice concerns, and seek clarifications on any issues.

    Dr. Asare expressed confidence that this engagement will help address the raised concerns and encourage collaboration between the EC and political entities.

    “For the good people of our country, we have addressed all the concerns that were raised and right now we have informed the political parties that we will have an IPAC meeting with them on Tuesday and in the said meeting, we will present the entire voter’s register to the political parties and other groups on Tuesday. So we want to request all of them to make themselves available at the meeting,” he said.

    The announcement follows requests from various political entities, particularly the National Democratic Congress (NDC), for an audit of the voter’s register. The NDC has voiced worries about alleged discrepancies in the provisional list and has called for immediate actions to enhance transparency in the electoral process.

    Although the Electoral Commission had previously dismissed calls for an audit, deeming them unnecessary, Dr. Asare reassured the public of the EC’s commitment to a fair and transparent electoral process.

  • Audit voters register in a week or face intense protests – NDC tells EC

    Audit voters register in a week or face intense protests – NDC tells EC

    The National Democratic Congress (NDC) has given the Electoral Commission (EC) a one-week ultimatum to act on their petition, which calls for a forensic audit of the ongoing voter registration process.

    Sammy Gyamfi, the National Communications Officer of the NDC, announced this ultimatum during an interview on Joy FM’s Top Story on September 17.

    He warned that if the EC fails to respond within the stipulated time, the party will escalate its demands with a series of nationwide protests aimed at pressuring the EC to ensure transparency in the electoral process.

    “We have decided to wait for just a week to see how they would respond. It is our expectation that they would do the needful because clearly, the intransigence they are displaying is not in the interest of Ghanaians,” Gyamfi stated.

    He emphasized that the NDC remains a law-abiding political party and will use peaceful and constitutional methods to express their dissatisfaction.

    “What you saw today is just the tip of the iceberg… we are not going to pick guns or fight anybody. We are a law-abiding political party, so we will do what the constitution of Ghana allows us to do—protest,” Gyamfi reiterated.

    Additionally, he questioned the EC’s refusal to permit a forensic audit of the voter registration process, suggesting that their resistance raises suspicions.

    “If the EC had nothing to hide, they should embrace the call for an audit as an opportunity to prove their transparency and be vindicated,” he argued.

    The NDC has signalled its intent to protest at EC district offices nationwide should the Commission fail to address their concerns within the one-week deadline.

  • Anomalies in voters register have been resolved – EC

    Anomalies in voters register have been resolved – EC

    Deputy Chairperson of the Electoral Commission (EC), Dr. Bossman Asare, has dismissed claims by the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) regarding unresolved discrepancies in the provisional voters register.

    He accused the NDC of exaggerating issues that, according to him, have already been addressed by the EC.

    Speaking during a Newsfile interview on Saturday, September 14, Dr. Asare argued that the NDC’s planned protest over the register’s alleged inaccuracies is unfounded. He emphasized that the concerns raised by the party have been resolved, and the voters register remains credible.

    “We at the Electoral Commission think that the NDC leadership who have taken the route of demonstration is misinforming their people. They seem to be exaggerating problems in the register which are non-existent,” he stated.

    Dr. Asare further assured the public, saying, “The Commission has made it very clear openly to the NDC, openly to the good people of Ghana, [and] international partners that we have a register that is robust, that is credible.”

    The NDC’s concerns about the provisional voter’s register have stirred debate, with the party raising alarms over certain discrepancies.

    However, Dr. Asare reiterated that the party is misleading its members by focusing on issues that, he claims, have already been resolved.

    He also addressed concerns about the NDC’s trust in the EC, recalling that during the 2016 general elections, the party did not raise significant objections despite issues with the register at that time.

    “Even in the 2016 register, there were more problems than what we are talking about now, but the NDC didn’t raise any serious issues then,” he said, pointing out the difference in the party’s stance now.

    “The issues they are raising now, they are problems we have addressed.”

    In a call for collaboration, Dr. Asare noted that the EC is open to further discussions with the NDC and other political parties to ensure a transparent and credible election. “We are inviting them to the discussion table,” he added, assuring that the EC remains committed to conducting peaceful and credible elections ahead of the December 7 general elections.

  • NDC bemoans EC’s delay in accepting proposal for forensic audit of voter register

    NDC bemoans EC’s delay in accepting proposal for forensic audit of voter register

    Director of Elections and IT for the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Dr. Edward Omane Boamah, says the Electoral Commission (EC) has not agreed to its demands to conduct a forensic audit of the voter register.

    According to him, the EC appears unwilling to open its books to scrutiny by anyone, and they are therefore not surprised by the Commission’s stance.

    Speaking to the press after the Inter-Party Advisory Committee on September 6, he said “They have not accepted the independent forensic audit expectedly.”

    “It is not all doctors who readily refer, it is not all workers who readily refer when issues are above them, some of them wait until bridges collapse.

    Some of them wait until patients are on the verge of dying before they push them. We would have loved that the Electoral Commission accepted this.”

    Mr. Boamah stated that conducting a forensic audit would restore public confidence in the Electoral Commission’s (EC) ability to oversee transparent and credible elections.

    On September 10, the Minority in Parliament expressed concerns about the voter register exhibition, claiming it had been manipulated.

    They argued that the voter register contains numerous inconsistencies and issues, which the EC has already acknowledged.

    As such, they cannot vouch for the integrity of the voter register, reiterating the stance of the opposition NDC for a forensic audit of the register.

  • NDC flags issues with voters register, demands forensic audit and Parliamentary probe

    NDC flags issues with voters register, demands forensic audit and Parliamentary probe

    Director of Elections for the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Dr. Edward Omane Boamah, has expressed serious concerns about the reliability of the Electoral Commission’s (EC) voters’ register in advance of the December 7 elections.

    In a Facebook post, Dr. Boamah criticized the current register as being “unfit for purpose” and called for either a forensic audit or a comprehensive parliamentary investigation to address what he describes as “fundamentally flawed” issues.

    He pointed out that the EC did not provide the NDC with the voters’ register in a timely manner before the exhibition period, suggesting that this delay was intentional.

    Despite these challenges, Dr. Boamah commended the NDC’s meticulous review process during the exhibition, which has uncovered numerous problems with the register that could threaten the integrity of the 2024 elections if left unresolved.

    “The register compiled by the EC is unfit for purpose.

    Without a forensic audit or thorough parliamentary investigation of the EC’s voter register, the register will remain incurably defective,” he stated.

    “Forget about adjudication! It’s obvious the register has deliberately been tampered with!”

    Key Anomalies Uncovered
    Dr. Omane Boamah detailed several anomalies found during the exercise, which he believes point to a flawed electoral process. These anomalies include:

    Missing Names: Registered voters whose names are absent from the voters’ register.
    Misplaced Qualified Voters: Individuals who are qualified to vote but have been wrongly placed on the Exception List or the Multiple List.
    Unremoved Disqualified Voters: Persons who were disqualified due to multiple registrations or successful challenges but remain on the Main Provisional Voters Register (PVR).
    Unauthorised Transfers: People who have been transferred without their knowledge, in addition to old transfers still appearing on the register.
    Polling Station Mismatches: Voters who have been moved from one polling station to another without their knowledge.
    Dr. Omane Boamah also criticised the “awkward process” that allowed voters to apply for proxy voting earlier this year without verifying their biometrics.

    Calls for Action
    The NDC’s Director of Elections has called for an immediate investigation by Ghana’s Parliament into the EC’s handling of the voters’ register.

    He stressed that if Parliament fails to act, both Ghanaians and the international community must pressure the EC to allow a forensic audit of its system, including the register.

    “As contained in the uploaded petition, the Parliament of Ghana must investigate the Electoral Commission.

    “If Parliament fails, Ghanaians, together with the international community, must exert enough pressure on the EC to permit a forensic audit of their system, including the register,” he emphasised.

    NDC’s Director of Elections, Dr. Edward Omane Boamah, has raised alarms over unresolved issues concerning the Electoral Commission’s (EC) management of voter registration and verification equipment.

    He emphasised that the theft of Biometric Voter Registration (BVR) laptops—captured by CCTV at the EC headquarters—has yet to be addressed. In addition, there are ongoing concerns about missing or stolen Biometric Verification Devices (BVDs).

    Dr. Omane Boamah also suggested that the NDC is planning a series of public forums and protests aimed at demanding transparency and accountability from the Electoral Commission.

    These actions are part of the party’s broader effort to address and resolve these critical issues.

    As Ghana prepares for the December 2024 elections, the NDC’s proactive stance underscores growing tensions and scrutiny surrounding the electoral process, with both political parties and the general public closely monitoring the EC’s actions.

  • Provisional voters register ready for pick up – EC to political parties 

    Provisional voters register ready for pick up – EC to political parties 

    Electoral Commission (EC) of Ghana has denied allegations that it has withheld the voters’ register from political parties.

    During a press conference on Monday, August 19, 2024, Deputy Electoral Commissioner Dr. Bossman Asare confirmed that the political parties have already received a copy of the voters’ register ahead of the voter exhibition exercise set to begin on August 20, 2024.

    He also emphasized that the commission remains within its scheduled timeline for distributing the register, according to citinewsroom.com.

    “We have heard in sections of the media that the commission has not given the provisional voter register to the political parties after informing the parties to bring their external drives.

    We want to place on record that, per Regulation 22 of CI 31 as amended by CI 126, the commission is required to give the provisional register to the political parties not later than three months from the end of the registration period.

    “As you may be aware, the limited registration ended on May 29, 2024, and the mop-up registration ended on August 3, 2023.”

    Dr. Asare clarified that the NDC had collected its external drive containing copies of the register.

    “On the basis of the limited registration, the commission has until the end of August 2024 to give the provisional register of the political parties. We wish to state that the external drives containing the provisional voters register are available for pickup.

    However, we can say from the records that the NDC has collected its external drive. The other parties have also collected,” he stated.

    The statement of the EC comes in the wake of pressure mounted by political parties for the release of the voters register ahead of the voter’s exhibition exercise on Tuesday, August 20, 2024.

  • Election 2024: Cooperate with us, we’ll soon present a credible voter register – EC to NDC

    Election 2024: Cooperate with us, we’ll soon present a credible voter register – EC to NDC

    Electoral Commission (EC) has assured that it will conduct a comprehensive voter exhibition exercise to ensure that political parties have access to a reliable voter register for the upcoming December elections.

    This assurance comes after the National Democratic Congress (NDC) urged the EC to release the provisional voter register for the December 7 general elections ahead of the exhibition.

    NDC’s Director of Elections, Dr. Boamah, took to Facebook to criticize the EC for the delay, attributing it to what he described as incompetence and a deliberate attempt to offer a subpar register to political parties.

    Dr. Boamah warned that this delay has raised significant concerns among the NDC and other stakeholders, suggesting that the EC’s approach, particularly its IT Department, could lead to chaos in Ghana if not promptly addressed.

    In response,the EC’s Director of Training, Dr. Serebuor Quaicoe, dismissed these claims during an interview on Citi FM’s Eyewitness News.

    He urged the NDC and other stakeholders to cooperate with the commission throughout the exhibition process to address any issues.

    Dr. Quaicoe assured that the final voter register, following the exhibition exercise, will be of high quality and meet the expectations of all political parties.

    “Why would we fight the same people who are going to help us do the work? We all know the quantum of work to be done…

    So, they should understand it and once we give it to them, they and the voters and everybody will help to contribute and by the time we finish the eight-day exhibition, we will identify all the challenges and rectify them.”

    “They should all expect that when everything is done we will give them the final register. So, we will do good work and give them the final register which will be a quality register,” he stated.

  • Number of registered voters are over 18.6 million – EC

    Number of registered voters are over 18.6 million – EC

    The Electoral Commission of Ghana (EC) has announced that there are currently over 18.6 million registered voters. Additionally, the recent limited registration drive has added 778,447 new voters to the roll.

    Jean Mensa, Chairperson of the Electoral Commission, revealed these figures during her appearance before Parliament to discuss preparations for the December 7 elections.

    She also shared that a mop-up registration exercise will be held from Thursday, August 1, 2024, to Saturday, August 3, 2024, across all district offices, including the new Guan district, to ensure that all eligible individuals are registered.

    Mensa noted that the voter exhibition exercise has been postponed to August to align with the mop-up registration.

    Furthermore, the Commission has appointed 210,000 officials who will receive training to ensure they can perform their duties effectively.

    The EC Chair emphasized that the Commission now has comprehensive data on all recruited staff, which will enhance management and coordination.

    In addition, Mensa announced the filing fees for the upcoming elections: GH¢100,000 for presidential candidates and GH¢10,000 for parliamentary candidates.

    To promote greater participation, the Commission will waive 25 percent of these fees for women and Persons With Disabilities (PWDs).

  • EC sabotaging 2024 elections by removing over 50,000 2023 Limited Voter Registrants from voters’ register – Suhuyini alleges

    EC sabotaging 2024 elections by removing over 50,000 2023 Limited Voter Registrants from voters’ register – Suhuyini alleges

    Tamale North Member of Parliament, Alhassan Suhuyini, has accused the Electoral Commission (EC) of attempting to suppress votes as part of a scheme to rig the 2024 December 7 elections.

    Mr. Suhuyini claims that the EC suppressed around 50,000 votes, roughly 250 votes per constituency. He expressed these concerns on his social media pages, urging political parties to stay vigilant and challenge the EC’s alleged move.

    He criticized the EC for not conducting last year’s limited voter registration exercise across all polling centers, opting instead for registration only at its district offices.

    He argued that this decision prevented many potential registrants from participating, ultimately disenfranchising them for the upcoming December 2024 general elections.

    Mr. Suhuyini‘s accusation comes amidst growing tension surrounding the fairness and transparency of the electoral process. He emphasized the importance of ensuring that all eligible voters have the opportunity to register and cast their votes without hindrance or suppression.

    He called on political parties to safeguard the democratic process and ensure that every vote counts, viewing the EC’s alleged actions as a threat to the integrity of the electoral system. He called for collective action to address these concerns.

    “Among others, the Electoral Commission is working to suppress votes as part of its misguided aim of rigging the December polls. The EC will start a limited registration exercise tomorrow, 7th May, 2024.”

    “Last September 2023, after many years of no registration, they conducted a similar exercise. For the first time the registration was conducted at their District Offices across the country, instead of electoral areas and polling stations as it then was.”

    “Despite the difficulties, potential voters traveled longer, sometimes uncomfortable distances and sometimes slept in the open for days before their data got captured and in most cases the political parties at high cost facilitated and helped to ease the burdens of these potential voters,” an excerpt of his post said.

  • Provisional voters register to be exhibited from Nov 3

    Provisional voters register to be exhibited from Nov 3

    The Electoral Commission (EC) is scheduled to conduct an exhibition of the provisional voters register in preparation for the District Level Elections (DLE).

    The exhibition is set to take place from Friday, November 3, 2023, to Tuesday, November 7, 2023.

    This exercise will occur at all 38,622 polling stations nationwide, running from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. It serves the purpose of allowing prospective voters to review their details, which include their name, age, gender, and designated polling station.

    Additionally, voters have the opportunity to request amendments or inclusions where necessary.

    During the exhibition, voters can raise objections to the names of unqualified individuals on the register and also request the removal of names belonging to deceased persons.

    These details were shared by Deputy Chair of the EC, Samuel Tettey, during a press conference held in Accra on Wednesday.

    “As part of the commission’s preparation towards the conduct of the district level elections slated for 19 November 2023, the commission will display or exhibit the provisional voters register at all the 38,622 polling stations across the country. The Commission will therefore exhibit the provisional voters register simultaneously at all polling stations which will serve as exhibition centres throughout the country from Friday 3rd November to Tuesday 7th November 2023.”

    “The exhibition exercise will start at 7  a.m. and end at 6  p.m. throughout the exercise. The purpose of the exhibition exercise is to allow prospective voters to verify details. That is name, age, sex, etc as captured during the registration exercise, and make requests for amendments or insertions where necessary. It will also help voters to know their polling stations on the day of voting,” he stated.

  • EC begins limited voters’ registration exercise today

    EC begins limited voters’ registration exercise today

    The Electoral Commission’s (EC) Limited Voters Registration Exercise is set to commence today, on Tuesday, September 12.

    This exercise will be carried out across all 268 District Offices of the EC and is slated to conclude on Monday, October 2.

    This decision to conduct the registration at the district offices has sparked disagreement, as some opposition political parties have taken legal action in the form of an injunction application against the EC.

    Their argument revolves around the concern that this approach may disenfranchise numerous young voters, particularly those residing in rural areas.

    Additionally, the EC has issued a directive stating that individuals who have reached the age of 18 since the last registration exercise or those who, for various reasons, did not register in 2020, should visit the District Office in their place of residence.

    They must bring either their Ghana Card or Ghana Passport as identification for registration purposes.

    “The general public is informed that it is a criminal offence for non-Ghanaians (foreigners) and persons who are not 18 years and above (minors) to attempt to register.

    “Offenders and those who guarantee for them will be liable for prosecution. Additionally, guarantors who guarantee for more than the legally mandated number of ten (10) persons will be prosecuted,” the EC warned.

    The EC further encouraged all eligible applicants to register and vote in the upcoming District Level Elections.

    “We urge the general public to support the 2023 Voters Registration Exercise,” it concluded.

  • I cheated multiple times on my wife – Adjetey Anang admits in memoir

    I cheated multiple times on my wife – Adjetey Anang admits in memoir

    In his recently published book, “Adjetey Anang: A Story of Faith, Imperfection, and Resilience,” renowned Ghanaian actor, Adjetey Anang has opened up about his marital struggles, including his admission of emotional and physical infidelity towards his wife.

    Adjetey Anang, known for his award-winning performances, courageously shares this sensitive aspect of his marriage journey.

    Acknowledging that every marriage faces its own challenges, Anang reflects on the failures within his own relationship with his wife Elorm Anang, whom he has been married to for nearly a decade.

    In chapter nine of his book, titled “Marital Challenges and Imperfection,” Anang candidly discusses the trials they have encountered, including the prolonged wait of over seven years to conceive their first child and his own acts of infidelity.

    The actor, known for his role in “Things We Do For Love,” humbly admits that what initially began as naive behavior with the opposite sex gradually developed into intense flirtation that occasionally crossed boundaries.

  • Voter education should begin with District Level Elections – CLGA to EC

    Voter education should begin with District Level Elections – CLGA to EC

    The Centre for Local Governance Advocacy (CLGA) has urged the Electoral Commission (EC) to initiate voter education in preparation for the upcoming District Level Elections (DLEs).

    According to the group, despite preparations towards the upcoming 2023 DLEs, it is concerned about the increasing general apathy which will be a result of poor voter turnout.

    “By law, the elections are expected to be held latest by December this year to elect new District Assembly and Unit Committee members to replace the current members whose mandate expires by January 2024. As at today the general public is yet to have any communication and information from the Electoral Commission regarding the elections, six months into the election year,” the Deputy Executive Director of the Centre for Local Governance Advocacy (CLGA), Gladys Gillian Tetteh, said during a forum held in Accra.

    She stressed that low voter turnout in DLEs raises concern over the legitimacy and interest of citizens in local governance.

    “While the last presidential elections recorded almost 80% voter turn-out, the 2019 DLE had 33.6 and increase of 3% from the 30.6% in 2015. Meanwhile, the high levels of apathy shown by the voting populace in District Level Elections though worrying also inadvertently may affect the quality and competency of people elected to the assemblies.

    “A major cause of the apathy is lack of early voter education and the Electoral Commission is therefore advised to start its voter education to ignite the enthusiasm,” she added.

    Meanwhile, Ghanaians are advised to make the October 3 District and Unit Committee elections a priority in order to elect Assembly Members and unit committees.

  • Husband found to be guilty of murder for pushing his pregnant wife to death

    Husband found to be guilty of murder for pushing his pregnant wife to death

    A violent husband who forced his expectant wife off Edinburgh’s Arthur’s Seat only days before she intended to leave him was sentenced to life in prison.

    In September 2021, Fawziyah Javed, 31, and their unborn child were assassinated near the landmark in the Scottish capital by Kashif Anwar, 29.

    Ms. Javed, an employment lawyer who was around 17 weeks pregnant when she fell 50 feet, used her final words to accuse Anwar of pushing her in front of another walker.

    Daniyah Rafique, 24, managed to reach her as she lay dying on the hillside and was told: ‘Don’t let my husband near me, he pushed me.’

    PC Rhiannon Clutton, 35, who rushed to the scene, said she was told by Ms Javed her husband pushed her because she ‘told him I wanted to end (the marriage)’.

    Anwar, from Leeds, was convicted of murder following a week-long trial at the city’s High Court.

    The judge, Lord Beckett, handed him a life sentence with a minimum term of 20 years.

    As he was led down to the cells, one of Ms Javed’s relatives screamed from the public gallery: ‘Die, you bastard.’

    A 29-year-old man from Yorkshire has been found guilty of murdering his wife in Edinburgh in September, 2021. Kashif Anwar was convicted at the High Court in Edinburgh today, Thursday, 6 April, 2023, of murdering 31-year-old Fawziyah Javed at Arthur?s Seat, Holyrood Park on Thursday, 2 September, 2021
    Kashif Anwar was convicted at the High Court in Edinburgh (Picture: Police Scotland)

    Jurors were visibly upset after the result, some crying, and the judge thanked them for the ‘admirable way’ they performed their duties.

    In a statement read on behalf of the Javed family outside court, they said: ‘Our life sentence began the day that our daughter was brutally murdered.

    ‘Whilst we welcome the verdict, this outcome does not feel like justice when compared to what we have lost.’

    Ms Javed’s mother, Nighat Yasmin Javed, said: ‘There are just no words to describe the depth of pain and grief.

    ‘There’s no words in the English dictionary that go deep enough.’

    She had told jurors her daughter first met Anwar at an opticians in Leeds city centre, near their home in Pudsey, where he worked as an optical assistant.

    The couple had an Islamic wedding on December 25, 2020, but the court concerns were raised within months.

    Mrs Javed told advocate depute Alex Prentice KC she was ‘very worried’ about her daughter, and revealed they had a secret code word she could use if she was ever unsafe.

    She said: ‘I said if you feel that you are in danger, just text me “I like cream cakes”, and I will contact the police.’

    Mrs Javed explained this was because of the ‘abuse, the violence, the aggression, and coercive control’ in the relationship.

    She said her daughter’s calls and texts were monitored by Anwar, and that between three or four months after the wedding her daughter wanted out of the marriage.

    Mrs Javed told the jury: ‘The accused was being abusive, controlling, manipulative, aggressive and violent towards her. She didn’t want to stay in a marriage like that, she wanted to leave.’

    The court heard how a midwife spoke to Ms Javed after becoming worried about the way Anwar spoke to her at Leeds General Infirmary weeks before the murder.

    Elizabeth Petty, 41, who was working on the L44 ward that evening, said a patient told her Ms Javed was told: ‘If you died during childbirth that would be okay. I would be free.’

    The midwife told the jury that when asked if that was what was said, Ms Javed had confirmed it was, and that she appeared ‘scared’ and ‘upset’.

    A week later, on August 30, 2021, a Walima– a Muslim marriage celebration event – was held for the couple.

    One of the guests, Lubna Qasim, told jurors Anwar was ‘really keen on visiting Arthur’s Seat.

    But Ms Qasim said her friend Ms Javed was scared of heights and had looked her straight in the eyes and replied: ‘I’m not so sure.’

    The couple checked into a hotel in Edinburgh the following day.

    They were due to return to Yorkshire on September 4, which would have been Ms Javed’s 32nd birthday.

    But jurors heard she planned not to return to Anwar’s home but go to her parents’ house and contact police to retrieve her belongings.

    She was pushed to her death from the landmark in Holyrood Park on September 2.

    CCTV showed the couple walking arm-in-arm through Waverley railway station towards Arthur’s Seat.

    A selfie of the pair was taken on Ms Javed’s phone at about 8.30pm – the last picture of her alive.

    Firefighter Sean Stratford was one of the emergency responders dispatched to the scene just after 9pm.

    He said he was approached by a man, who he could not identify: ‘He said that he stood up to take a selfie, he slipped and bumped her and she had fallen.

    ‘She was not in a very good state at all.’ Ms Javed was declared dead on the hillside at 10.18pm.

    In the early hours of the next morning, PC Sean Henderson, 37, said Anwar was told of the news.

    He told jurors: ‘There wasn’t much of a reaction, in my opinion, he didn’t say much to it and didn’t have any obvious physical reaction.’

    Anwar told PC Henderson: ‘I know how this looks. We had our problems as a couple, but … ”

    The court was told Anwar never finished what he was saying as more officers entered the room and he was arrested on suspicion of murder.

    PC Henderson told the court: ‘From start to near finish, he was very calm and composed throughout. I was actually struck how calm his demeanour was throughout.’

    Detective Constable Steven Cavallero told the court when Anwar was in custody he asked: ‘How many years do you think I will get? Double figures? Maybe 15 to 20 years you reckon?

  • Why should we celebrate Independence day when Ghana lacks  vaccines for children? – Dr Anaba quizzes

    Why should we celebrate Independence day when Ghana lacks vaccines for children? – Dr Anaba quizzes

    Executive Director of the African Center for Health Policy Research and Analysis, Dr. Thomas Anaba, is perplexed that the government is holding its 66th independence celebrations while infants are in danger owing to a lack of vaccines.

    The drastic shortage of vaccines that are meant to be administered to children at infancy to protect them from certain diseases is getting alarming.

    Currently, nursing mothers have been moving to health centres in a bid to secure unavailable vaccines which are posing a huge threat to the healthcare delivery system.

    Experts fear that this may lead to a full-blown outbreak among babies.

    “Do you know what will happen to a child who gets polio today? In 10 or 20 years time he will be disabled probably in the streets begging… we will have children who will be vegetables lying in their homes if they get measles. Will we be proud of that?” he quizzed on The Probe, Sunday.

    Already, some 100 cases of measles have been recorded in the northern part of Ghana.

    Last week, officials of the Health Ministry and the Ghana Health Service blamed various factors including the recent rapid cedi depreciation for their failure to procure the products.

    For Dr Thomas Anaba, it will be misplaced if government goes ahead with the planned pomp and pageantry for the country’s anniversary celebration at the expense of the newborns.

    “I don’t see why we should celebrate independence if we don’t have vaccines for our children. I have seen other countries use the money for independence to do communal labour, cleaning of communities.

    “Why can’t the government say that, look we don’t have money to buy vaccines. We have programmes going on in the country which are not very essential,” he said.

    While the Health Minister is yet to officially come clear on the rationale for the inadequacy, healthcare practitioners are predicting doom if nothing is done.

    Speaking on JoyNews, Dr Thomas Anaba insisted that prioritising neo-natal health should supersede every other issue even as Ghana celebrates 66 years of independence on March 6, 2023.

    The former Medical Director of Ridge Hospital further demanded that the Health Minister takes steps to ameliorate the situation.

    President of the Paediatric Society of Ghana, Dr Hilda Mantebea Boye also called on government to pay attention to ensure the newborns are healthy.

  • George Pell’s funeral marred with protesters in Sydney

    George Pell’s funeral marred with protesters in Sydney

    Cardinal George Pell’s funeral on Thursday in Australia, mourners murmured prayers and sang hymns; however, hecklers kept shouting his damnation.


    The Catholic priest, who passed away last month at the age of 81 due to complications from surgery, leaves behind a difficult legacy.

    He was once the top assistant to the Pope and the top Catholic in Australia.

    But unsubstantiated claims that he committed child sexual abuse and covered it up damaged his reputation.

    These accusations dominated Thursday’s events in Sydney. Police outside St. Mary’s Cathedral took action at one point to separate irate mourners from chanting protesters. One protester was earlier detained.

    Inside the church, where Cardinal Pell served as the city’s archbishop for over a decade, dignitaries including former Prime Ministers John Howard and Tony Abbott filled pews. Hundreds more gathered in a forecourt to watch the requiem Mass on big screens.

    Noticeably absent were Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet – himself a devout Catholic. Both sent delegates.

    In a message read to the congregation, Pope Francis praised Cardinal Pell’s “dedication to the gospel and to the Church”, while Archbishop of Sydney Anthony Fisher lauded him as “giant of the Catholic Church in Australia” who had been wrongly demonised.

    Over six decades, Cardinal Pell rose to prominence in the Church as a strong supporter of traditional Catholic values.

    He took on the role of Vatican treasurer in 2014 but left in 2017, returning to Australia to face trial on child sexual abuse charges. He was convicted, then later acquitted on appeal.

    Many of Cardinal Pell’s supporters believe he was unfairly persecuted, and that his record on the issue of child sexual abuse is part of what made him great.

    Mr Abbott, who spoke at the funeral, claimed Cardinal Pell had been the first Australian Catholic to sack child abusers and report them to police. Others pointed to the landmark – but controversial – compensation scheme he set up.

    “He was greatest man I’ve ever known,” Mr Abbott said.

    Cardinal George Pell
    Image caption,Cardinal George Pell was Australia’s highest-ranking Catholic

    Others who gathered to pay their respects said he was a kind man, quick to offer support and encouragement to those going through challenging times.

    One mourner told the BBC he hopes the cardinal will be remembered “for the things he did and not for the things that he was accused of”.

    “He was a good man,” Nathan, 33, added. “He fought for the rights of many people, contrary to popular belief.”

    But outside the cathedral square, child abuse survivors remembered him as someone who had failed to protect them.

    Some travelled from other states to tie ribbons to the church fence – a gesture seen in Australia as a tribute to victims of the Church abuse crisis. Most were cut down overnight on Wednesday by supporters of Cardinal Pell.

    A landmark inquiry into Australian child sexual abuse found Cardinal Pell had personally known of abuse by priests as early as the 1970s and had failed to act. Cardinal Pell disputed the findings, saying they were “not supported by evidence”.

    Maureen, 75, came to leave a ribbon on behalf of a close friend, who was abused by a Catholic teacher.

    “I can’t let today pass without standing for him. He is not well enough to stand for himself,” she told the BBC.

    Maureen tying a ribbon to the fence
    Image caption,Maureen was among those who left hundreds of ribbon tributes for child sexual abuse survivors

    Protesters gathering in parkland opposite the cathedral remembered Cardinal Pell as a “monstrous bigot”.

    “Pell stood for blatant homophobia, misogyny… covering up abuse within the Catholic Church,” organiser Kim Stern told the BBC.

    “We think it’s pretty disgusting he’s getting a send-off like this.”

    Also out in force were police, trying to temper simmering tensions.

    Thursday’s funeral follows weeks of tense debate in Australia about Cardinal Pell’s legacy.

    Mourner Louisa Pastoois personally admired the cardinal, but she told the BBC she has accepted his legacy will be mixed.

    “The legacy he leaves behind in the Church, and the world… is something different,” Louisa said.

    “I think there needed to be someone to take the blame for all that’s happened in the church… there needs to be a face to the sins and unfortunately, it was his.”

  • Missing names in Special Voting: Security Expert warns of serious security implications

    Security Expert, Adam Bonaa, has intensified his call on the EC to rectify the issue of missing names on the Special Voters Register as he warns of the serious implication this occurrence may have on the December 7th elections.

    According to him, this phenomenon may cause serious security issues if left unchecked.

    Speaking to Samuel Eshun on the Happy Morning Show, he explained what may happen when he said:
    “The implication is that first of all we are going to have not so motivated officers. This is because the officer has been disenfranchised. And even if these ones are allowed to vote early on Election Day, we all know that in this country there is likely to be a delay in the setup of the apparatus for the voting”.

    He furthered, “The chances are that you are going to have officers who are supposed to be protecting human beings and ballot boxes looking elsewhere when there are issues. Officers may not be on time at a polling station because they may have gone to a different polling centre to vote”.

    Adam Bona reiterated that he “sees challenges ahead” and it is thus important the EC addresses the issue before it is too late.

    Security Analyst, Adam Bona has alleged that more than sixty per cent of the officers who will be performing security duties on election day were excluded from the list of persons eligible to take part in the special voting.

    However, the Electoral Commission(EC) has denied claims by Security Analyst, Adam Bona.

    Source: e.TV Ghana


  • Voter transfer, proxy voters slated for October 20-22

    The Electoral Commission has scheduled the compilation of Transferred Voters Lists, and the Proxy Voters Lists for the 2020 Presidential and Parliamentary Elections for October 20th to 22nd.

    A statement copied to the Ghana News Agency said a registered voter who is a student or a Security official who would be on special duties at a different constituency could apply to the Returning Officer of the Constituency to be included in the Transferred Voters list of the preferred voting location.

    It said applicants would need to provide physical proof of the new residence and shall sign a Declaration by the Returning Officer before assignment to a new polling station.

    The statement said a registered voter who due to ill-health or absence from the constituency would not be able to vote on the Polling Day, might apply to the Returning Officer of the Constituency or the Commission for the name of the selected proxy to be entered onto the Proxy list.

    It said the applicant would be required to complete a proxy form in quadruplicate and endorsed by the Returning Officer.

    The statement said a person appointed as a Proxy might vote in the elections at the Polling Station where the registered Voter was assigned to vote at the time of registration.

    “A person whose application to vote by Proxy is accepted and endorsed by the Returning Officer of the Constituency or the Commission, shall not vote in the election in respect of which the Application was granted,” it said.

    Source: GNA

  • October 7: EC to exhibit voter register for one-day registration

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has announced October 7, 2020, as the date for the exhibition of the voter register for Ghanaian citizens who took part in the recent one-day voter’s registration exercise.

    The one-day exercise will take place from 7 am to 6 pm, the EC said in a public announcement.

    The Commission also urged all persons who took part in the exercise to go to the District Offices where they registered to check their names and ensure that all their details are properly captured.

    It will be recalled that the voter register was re-opened on October 1 to enable those who have attained the age of 18 and citizens who were not able to register to do so.

    However, during the exercise, a number of Biometric Voter Registration (BVR) kits at some centres issued applicants with identification (ID) numbers that had already been issued.

    In a statement, the EC explained that the error had been corrected.

    It said the affected applicants would be contacted and issued with new ID cards with unique numbers.

    “It is important to note that, the biometric and biographic details of the affected applicants are intact,” the statement added.

    Source: Graphic.com.gh

  • Anomalies characterise one-day voter registration – EC urges calm

    The one-day voter registration exercise on Thursday, October 1 was fraught with anomalies at some centres.

    According to the Electoral Commission, Ghana (EC) some of the biometric voter registration (BVR) kits issued voter identity numbers that have already been issued to some of the applicants.

    “This error has been corrected,” the Commission said in a statement at the end of the exercise.

    “The affected applicants will be contacted and issued with new ID cards with unique numbers.”

    The anomalies with the voter register has been a grave source of concern for the main opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), for which reason its flagbearer, John Dramani Mahama, and his running mate, Professor Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang, suspended their campaigns. They have since resumed.

    But the EC assured that all those anomalies have been rectified with the missing names restored.

    Its Chair, Jean Mensa, told journalists last week that the errors have been reduced to barely 7,000 from 60,000.

    In the latest reported cases, the EC assured that “the biometric and biographic details of the affected applicants are intact”.

    Source: 3 News

  • Voter ID numbers duplicated during one-day voter registration exercise

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has indicated that there was the duplication of some voter ID numbers during the registration process earlier on October 1.

    “It has come to the attention of the Commission that a number of Biometric Voter Registration (BVR) kits at some Registration Centres have issued Applicants with Voter ID numbers that have already been issued,” the EC said in a statement.

    But the commission added that “this error has been corrected.”

    The affected applicants will be contacted and issued with new ID cards with unique numbers,” according to the commission.

    “It is important to note that, the biometric and biographic details of the affected Applicants are intact,” the EC assured further.

    The electoral roll was opened from 7 am to 6 pm at its district offices for persons who could not participate in the mass registration exercise organised in June and July.

    Some of the people who participated are voters who were outside the country due to COVID-19 restrictions, those who were under a 14-day mandatory quarantine and could not take part in the mass voter registration, and eligible voters who were duly issued voter ID cards but whose names are missing from the register under exhibition.

    Persons who recently turned 18 were also given the chance to register.

    The Public Elections Regulations law indicated that the EC can “include in the register of voters, the name of a person who qualifies for registration as a voter and is registered but shall not include in the register of voters the name of a person who qualifies to register as a voter for an election but who registers less than sixty days to that election.”

    Find below the full statement

    Source: citinewsroom

  • Electoral Commission to reopen voters register on October 1

    The Electoral Commission of Ghana has announced it will on Thursday, October 1, 2020, reopen the just compiled voters register for one day.

    According to the Commission, the exercise will afford the opportunity for persons above the ages of 18 and citizens who were not able to register in the main the exercise to do so.

    “The Registration will take place in the district in the district offices nationwide and will start from 7am to 6pm,” a statement from the EC read.

    Meanwhile, the Electoral Commission says it has successfully retrieved the names of “valid electorate” that it initially failed to capture into the provisional register that was recently compiled.

    Speaking at press briefing on Monday, September 28, 2020, Chairperson of the EC, Jean Mensa, indicated that the register has since been updated electronically with the data that was retrieved.

    This comes after the opposition National Democratic Congress alleged that some 7,000 names of applicants have been deliberately removed from the register.

    But the EC refuted the claims and insisted that voters who duly registered and were issued with Voter ID Cards but cannot find their names on the provisional register, can rectify the situation during the just ended voters exhibition exercise.

    Read the statement below:

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • 88,000 duplication detected in voters register rectified – EC

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has indicated that it has rectified all duplicate voter identification numbers that were detected during the just-ended voter registration exercise.

    Addressing a press conference on Monday, Chairperson, Jean Mensa explained that the duplicates occurred because the registration kits were offline hence all voter ID numbers were issued independently.

    She said 88,000 duplicates were detected when the national data came together online.

    The EC she announced has taken steps to issue new ID cards with the new numbers to the affected voters.

    She added that political parties and their agents would be invited to monitor the re-issuance of the said duplicate ID cards.

    She assured Ghanaians that all those who have been affected would vote on December 7.

    She further disclosed that the duplicates were recorded because some registration kits had the same unique code.

    “To prevent the duplication of voter ID numbers, each kit is given a unique code. What we realised during the registration was that in instances where the registration kits become faulty, they were withdrawn from the field and a new one was sent to the field and the same code was put on the new one,” Mrs Mensah said.

    “The same code as the one withdrawn was placed on the new one. However, when the faulty kit was brought back to the field, that code was not changed and so you realised that we had two kits with the same code and this meant that they would produce the same ID numbers”.

    She said the current voter database does not contain any duplicate voter ID numbers.

    Source: rainbowradioonline.com

  • EC detects 88,000 duplicate voter ID cards in register

    The Electoral Commission (EC) says all duplicate voter identification numbers that were detected during the just-ended voter registration excercise have been “remedied” and the affected applicants have been re-issued new numbers.

    According to the Chairperson of the Commission, Mrs Jean Mensa, the duplicates occurred because the registration kits were offline hence all voter ID cards were issued independently.

    She said 88,000 duplicates were detected and that the Commission was in the process of issuing new ID cards.

    Addressing a press conference in Accra on Monday, September 28, Mrs Mensa said political parties and their agents would be invited to monitor the re-issuance of the said duplicate ID cards.

    Source: Graphic.com.gh

  • NDC executives charged to monitor Thursday’s voter registration

    The Greater Accra Regional Chairman of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), Joseph Ade Coker, has charged all the 34 constituency executives to spend all their time at the various Electoral Commission (EC) offices on October 1, 2020.

    The NDC Chairman said all the executives should be vigilant during the one-day voter registration exercise.

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has said it will re-open the voter register on Thursday to give opportunity to those who have attained the age of 18 and citizens who for one reason or the other were not able to register in the just ended registration exercise to do so.

    The registration is expected to take place in the district offices nationwide from 7am to 6pm.
    Speaking at the launch of the Ablekuma West Constituency campaign on Sunday, September 27, Mr. Ade Coker alleged that the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP) has planned to rig the elections, therefore the exercise is meant to register those who are not meant to register.

    He said the NPP has planned to register their members who came to Ghana after the airport was reopened and so the executives in all the constituencies should spend their time at the district offices to ensure that those registering are indeed from the constituency.

    The Ablekuma West NDC Candidate, Rev Kweku Addo, sharing his seven thematic pillars, pledged to the constituents to institute a regular meeting with them to ensure their needs are addressed.

    He added that education and sports development, empowerment support and infrastructural development would be backbone of his tenure.

    Rev Addo noted that sanitation, security and recreational facilities would be created in the constituency.

    The Member of Parliament for Ablekuma South Constituency, Dr. Alfred Oko Vanderpuije, who is also the former Mayor of Accra, alluded that he knew the challenges in the Constituency and Rev Addo would be in a better position to solve them.

    Source: 3 News

  • EC contemplating new voter registration for specific groups

    The Electoral Commission is contemplating organising a fresh voter registration exercise for specific groups of eligible voters.

    These groups include people who were outside the country due to the COVID-19 restrictions, those who were under a 14-day mandatory quarantine and could not take part in the mass voter registration, and eligible voters who were duly issued voter ID cards but whose names are missing from the register.

    This was revealed by the EC at an Inter-Party Advisory Committee (IPAC) meeting held today, Thursday, 24 September 2020.

    The two major political parties, the New Patriotic Party (NPP) and the National Democratic Congress (NDC), however, agreed that such persons cannot vote in the December polls even if they are captured onto the voter roll.

    This is because their registration will not meet the statutory 60-day period before elections.

    The NDC Director of IT, Kwame Osei Agyeman-Griffiths, also wondered whether the Commission would do a second round of exhibition to validate such voters, too.

    Peter Mac Manu, Manager of the NPP campaign, represented the governing party.

    Source: Class FM

  • EC extends voters exhibition exercise by two days

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has extended the voters exhibition exercise by two days.

    This, according to the commission, is aimed at serving the interest of its stakeholders and promote greater participation and inclusion.

    By this, the exercise which started last Friday, September 18, would end on Sunday, September 27, 2020.

    A statement issued by the EC on Wednesday said, “The Commission is of the view that this extension will allow even more stakeholders to check and verify their voter registration details. This is instrumental for the achievement of a clean and credible Voters Register.

    “The last day of the Exhibition Exercise will therefore be Sunday 27th September, 2020. We encourage the Public to take advantage of the extension by making time to verify their registration details.”

    It also encouraged voters to verify their registration details by sending their Voter ID Numbers to the Short Code 1422.

    Meanwhile the National Democratic Congress (NDC) has expressed dissatisfaction in the voter exhibition exercise.

    According to the Flagbearer of the party, Mr John Mahama, the ongoing voter register exhibition has been fraught with “so much disorder, anarchy and chaos”.

    Source: graphic.com.gh

  • EC extends voters exhibition exercise

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has extended the Voters Exhibition Exercise from Friday 25th September to Sunday 27th September 2020.

    This according to the election management body is part of efforts to serve the interest of its stakeholders and promote greater participation and inclusion.

    The Commission said it is of the view that the extension will allow even more stakeholders to check and verify their voter registration details.

    “This is instrumental for the achievement of a clean and credible Voters Register,” the EC said in a statement.

    The last day of the exhibition exercise will, therefore, be Sunday 27th September 2020.

    The Commission has encouraged the public to take advantage of the extension by making time to verify their registration details.

    Voters may verify their registration details by visiting their exhibition centres or by sending their Voter ID Numbers to the Short Code 1422.

    The exhibition exercise has, however, witnessed several anomalies including duplication of names, missing names and similar serial numbers for different voters.

    The main opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) has expressed worry over the anomalies but the EC says the exhibition is meant to correct such irregularities describing it as “normal”.

    Source: Class FM

  • Akufo-Addo puts out voter registration details

    President Nana Akufo-Addo has dropped a screenshot of his voter registration details after texting his voter identity (ID) card number to the shortcode 1422.

    Posting this details on his official Facebook page, the president urged Ghanaians to try and send their voter ID card numbers to shortcode 1422 to confirm their voter ID details in addition to going to their respective registration centres to verify.

    He posted: “In addition to going to your respective registration centres to verify your voter registration details, you can also send your voter ID card number, just as I have done, to short code 1422 to confirm your voter ID details.”

    The Electoral Commission has introduced a Short Message Service platform to enable registered voters to access their registration details.

    The shortcode, 1422, was activated on Friday, September 18 and will be active up to Friday, September 25, 2020.

    To access registration details, voters would have to text their voter ID card number to the shortcode.

    Source: Happy 98.9FM


  • FULL TEXT: NDC press conference on exhibition of 2020 voters register

    Good morning Ladies and Gentlemen from the media and welcome to this all-important Press Conference. Your presence here gives us comfort that we can count on you in raising critical issues that affect our country and our democracy in the supreme interest of the people of Ghana.

    As you are aware, the Electoral Commission commenced an exhibition of the provisional voters register on 18th September 2020. Our observation of the exercise so far revealed grave anomalies that threaten the conduct of Peaceful, Free and Fair elections on December 7 this year. We, therefore, invited you here this morning to share our observations with you and the entirety of Ghanaians.

    The NDC wishes to emphatically state that since the inception of the fourth republic we have not seen our otherwise respected EC present to the good people of Ghana such a malformed and anaemic register going into a major election. While we will present you with impeccable evidence on the serious anomalies on the provisional voters’ register, we also encourage you our friends in the media and all well-meaning Ghanaians to make time and visit exhibition centres to see for yourselves the mess that the Jean Mensa and Bossman Asare led EC has created.

    LIMITED DURATION FOR THE EXHIBITION EXERCISE

    Ladies and Gentlemen, the exhibition of the voters’ register is a critical aspect of our electoral process. It is through the exhibition exercise that citizens who register get the opportunity to confirm that their names and other details are duly captured on the voters roll such that they will not be disenfranchised on voting day.

    In view of the importance of this exercise the duration for exhibition in the past was between 11 and 21 days. In 2012 when a new register was compiled, the duration for the exhibition exercise was 11 days (1st to 10th September, 2012). Even in 2016 where only limited registration was conducted in preparation for that year’s elections, the duration for the exhibition exercise was 21 good days (18th July to 7th August).

    Unfortunately, with the 2020 registration exercise that was characterized by various anomalies, chaos and also involves close to 17 million prospective voters, the EC rather strangely announced an 8-day exhibition exercise. We wish to also place on record that unlike in the past where the EC called an IPAC meeting to discuss such an important activity for the inputs from political parties and other stakeholders, as characteristic of Jean Mensa’s autocratic and ‘yentie obiaa’ leadership style, the EC failed to do so.

    COPIES OF PROVISIONAL VOTERS REGISTER

    Per regulation 22(2) of the Public Elections Regulations (Voters Registration) C.I.91 “At the end of the compilation of the provisional register as provided in sub-regulation (1), a copy of the provisional register shall be given to each registered political party in the form determined by the Commission.”

    Whereas the NDC complied with the request of the EC and duly submitted a hard drive to the EC as early as 7th September 2020, it was not until Wednesday 16th September 2020 at around 8:10 pm, barely 35 hours to the commencement to the exhibition exercise that we received the provisional register for the EC. In a sudden twist of events, the EC called us the following day 17th September to return the register as they had detected some anomalies with the register for a new one. We graciously returned the register to the EC on the same day.

    It was not until Friday 18th September at 8:46 pm that we finally got the register for the exhibition exercise. Take note, Ladies and Gentlemen, that the exhibition exercise commenced on Friday. This implies that we did not have the register for the exercise that day. What we political parties normally do is to receive the register in good time and print copies for all our agents to ensure that they monitor the exhibition process effectively.

    We are reliably informed that the EC had already dispatched copies of the register they asked us to return to its officials across the country for the exhibition exercise. Given that it was too late to replace the Provisional Register with the current one, the EC knowingly and willfully instructed its officials to use the wrong copies of the register on the first day of the exhibition exercise.

    Again, Regulation 23(3) of C.I. 91 states that “The Commission shall in addition to the publication provided in sub-regulation (1), post the provisional register on the website of the Commission”. It is important to note that our so-called competent EC is yet to fulfill this simple obligation imposed on them by the law they themselves drafted and sent to Parliament for enactment. Ladies and Gentlemen, you may check for yourselves now at www.ec.gov.gh to see if the EC has uploaded the register on the website as required by law.

    Ladies and Gentlemen, even with the copies of the register the EC is using for the exhibition exercise so far, our observations show widespread anomalies at various exhibition centres across the country. So far our officials and agents have reported anomalies from all regions except Asawase in the Ashanti Region. This has already given us cause to believe that the anomalies and distortions in the register may be deliberate as it is widespread only in our strongholds. We have come to the conclusion that the current Provisional Register cannot be relied on as the Provisional Register as the level of distortion is incredible.

    ADJUDICATION & DE-DUPLICATION

    The EC constituted an Adjudication Committee to look into issues regarding multiple registrations during the registration exercise. Ideally, this Committee is supposed to first complete its work before the exhibition exercise. The Committee last met on 27th August and scheduled to meet again on 3rd September but that meeting never came on. The Committee was supposed to complete its work before the provisional register could be finalized. It is therefore strange that the EC has gone ahead with the exhibition exercise. This therefore raises questions as to the register that is being exhibited.

    Secondly, we also have information that people outside the shores of Ghana are being flown down to be registered on 29th September, 2020. How true is this assertion and will the people be part of the Provisional Register?

    Ladies and Gentlemen of the media, before touching on some of the unpardonable issues that have come up so far at the various Exhibition Centres nationwide we wish to first draw your attention to something strange that happened at the EC’s district office in Ablekuma Central Constituency on Friday September 18, 2020. EC officials were caught on video late at night printing and laminating unspecified number of Voter ID Cards. Obviously, this is just one of the Modern Rigging Techniques the EC has employed going into this election. Our suspicion is that either the new ID cards were being printed for non-Ghanaians who are not legible to vote or persons who did not register at all. This confirms rumours that EC officials were still secretly registering people after the official registration exercise had ended. Once such cards are issued to people whose identities were not scrutinized, these persons will go to the exhibition centers and fill in the Inclusion Forms as if they were mistakenly taken out of the register. Obviously this is part of the grand plan between Jean Mensa and the failed NPP to subvert the sovereign will of Ghanaians on 7th December. But we are vigilant and under no circumstance shall we sit that for Jean Mensa to perpetrate such a treasonable act on Ghanaians.

    We condemn this shameful act of thievery vehemently. We therefore call for an independent investigation of this incident and demand an explanation from the EC as to how any group could be permitted to print such numbers of voter ID cards when exhibition is ongoing.

    We wish to use this opportunity to call on our officers and agents to ensure strict compliance with our earlier directive to compare the exhibition list with the daily print out obtained during the registration exercise and reject all new names that do not exist on the daily print outs.

    Now to the charade exhibition of Jean Mensa /Bossman Asare voters register. From evidence gathered so far by our hardworking monitoring teams across the nation, the anomalies that have characterized the register can best be described as a comedy of errors that we predicted during the shambolic voter registration exercise. Never in our electoral history have we witnessed the display of such expensive incompetence by one of the most internationally revered institutions.

    Key among the errors observed from the exercise include:

    1. outright omission or removal of registrants through duplication
    2. mismatch of Personal Identification Numbers
    3. multiple instances of same photograph on different ID Cards.

    Below are details of the anomalies we have been able to capture to share with you.

    SAME PIN NUMBER ISSUED TO MULTIPLE APPLICANTS

    Under no circumstance should any database, be it biometric or otherwise have multiple people issued with the same Personal Identification Numbers (PIN). In other words, the uniqueness of a PIN must be guaranteed at all times in any credible database. We wish to state categorically that this was NOT the case in the previous register which the EC has thrown away. It is therefore sad that after spending almost 1 Billion Ghana Cedis to compile a new register, we have ended up with a register which does not guarantee the uniqueness of the PINs which is the most fundamental principle in a database design.

    Indeed, the essence of Identity Management is to register, clean up the data and issue unique PINs to every single registrant. Having duplicated and triplicated PINs is akin to a bank issuing the same account number to multiple customers. That is how serious and fundamental a PIN is. It is therefore our position that the new voters register has failed a fundamental credibility test.

    Ladies and Gentlemen from the media we present to you some location specific anomalies:

    1. Many exhibition centres in the districts do not have Biometric Verification Devices (BVDs). For instance out of 1078 polling stations in the whole of the Western North region, only 400 had BVDs. This means that the BVDs are not been used to verify people on the register in this exhibition exercise even though the EC budgeted for these devises and was supposed to procure them for use at every polling station.
    2. There are several instances of disparities between details of printouts obtained during registration and the information on the provisional register being exhibited.
    3. There were missing names, replication of names, swapping of photographs and differences in ID Numbers at virtually all centres visited. In Asunafo South Constituency in the Ahafo Region for instance, male photos on the register were used for female registrants and vice versa and names are missing from the register. Some of those successfully challenged still have their names on the register. In Asunafo North, one photograph was used for several people on the register
    4. At some centres the EC’s presence was useless. For instance the exercise was halted at the Zawse primary school polling station in the Binduri Constituency when the residents realized that only 14 names were captured out of 413 registered at the centre
    5. In the New Edubiase constituency there was a case where voters got to the centres to check their names and instead they were issued with new cards with new ID Numbers.
    6. Many Ghanaians have described the short code (1422) announced by the EC as a scam. This is because the information returned by the system usually belonged to a different registrant.
    7. In some other cases those who out of curiosity visited their exhibition centres after verifying with the short code were shocked to find out that their names were missing from the register although the system had verified them via the short code.
    8. Some exhibition centres either started early or did not work on the first day of exhibition. This has a potential of putting those who trooped there on the first day off. Strangely this happened mostly in the strong holds of the NDC. For example, at Nkwanta south in the Oti Region, all polling stations but the Nkwanta township centre were unable to commence on the first day.
    9. Still in the Oti Region, as at 12:30pm on the first day the EC Officials had not reported, leaving many registrants stranded. Similar incident was reported from other NDC strongholds.
    10. People who were successfully challenged during the registration and whose names were expected to be deleted still had their names on the provisional register.
    11. At the M/A Primary School, Mbradan Exhibition Centre, the picture of one registered voter had replaced the pictures of almost all the registered voters at that polling station.

    Ladies and gentlemen of the media, these are only few instances time will allow us to mention. As stated supra a more comprehensive compilation would be available to relevant stakeholders in due course. Meanwhile the EC does not seem to disappoint when it comes to miraculously targeting the NDC strongholds to inflict their “errors” on them. Isn’t it curious that most of the Exhibition Centres affected with deletions were in the Zongos? What about the fact that in the Afram Plains South, the phenomenon was more pronounced on the Islands?

    SMS SHORT CODE VERIFICATION

    We have also take note of the announcement by the EC on the use of a short code to confirm the existence of their names on the voters register. We note that the EC has failed to inform Ghanaians in its publicity that the use of the short code attract charges. Since the EC’s budget has already been approved. We wonder who the money will be going to since the EC is not bothered when it comes to issues of transparency.

    From our observations so far, we have come to the conclusion that the use of the short code to verify the existence of their names on the register is not reliable. We therefore wish to caution our supporters and the electorate from relying on this method of confirming their details on the register. We wish to encourage everyone to find time and physically visit the exhibition centres to confirm their names to be sure that their names are on the register to accomplish the rescue mission come 7th December, 2020.

    COMMENDATION TO CSOS AND WELL-MEANING GHANAIANS

    We wish to use this opportunity to commend various civil society organisations and well-meaning Ghanaians who have been vigilant and critical of the electoral process so far that has helped to ensure that the EC does the right things for a credible, free and fair elections. We wish to encourage them to do more as the elections approach.

    MESSAGE TO EMINENT CITIZENS

    In previous elections, the nation relied on well respected eminent Ghanaians to intervene through quiet diplomacy when there were tensions. We were therefore concerned that the very people the nation will rely on as moral voices were co-opted into a so-called Eminent Advisory Committee by the Electoral Commission. We had cause to caution our eminent personalities that were invited to be part of this committee. Having been coopted as part of the EC, we have come to the conclusion that the Jean Mensa led Electoral Commission acts on the advice of the Eminent Advisory Committee and therefore the Committee endorses all their actions and inactions. With this development, we wish to ask members of the Eminent Advisory Committee whether we should hold them responsible for the mess and the chaos the EC is causing?

    To the rest of our moral voices religious leaders, statesmen and the media, there are a lot of things going wrong but unfortunately we don’t hear them comment on any of these things. There is a point in history that a country where the SILENCE of the responsible and Senior citizens in the society can no longer be golden.

    But we wish to remind everyone that God is watching all of us and if by their silence this country is plunged into chaos, all of us will suffer. But it is not too late for concerned citizens to speak out and condemn acts that have the potential to undermine our democracy. Such continuous silence in the Face of such blatant disregard for common sense abuse of office and incompetence is tantamount to a betrayal of their hallowed positions in society and the entire populace.

    MESSAGE TO GHANAIANS

    In a democracy, governments are changed or maintained through the ballot. The outcome of free fair and credible elections is the sovereign will of the people. Therefore any act that undermines this sacred exercise and denies people their free will is tantamount to treason. All Ghanaians must therefore rise up to protect their vote and resist any act that undermines their sovereign will.

    A CALL TO DUTY

    We acknowledge that these are difficult times in our democratic dispensation but we should be reminded that we are also dealing with an EC that is hell bent on doing the bidding of the failed NPP government. As a result, they ignored wise counsel that the registration period was too short to compile a credible register. With this in mind, we urge all our members, supporters and sympathizers to ensure that their names are on the register for the rescue mission. They should therefore come out in their numbers to check their names in the provisional register at all the exhibition centers.

    We know the exhibition exercises attract low turnout, sometimes in single digit percentage. However, we are not in normal times so we plead with all NDC sympathizers as well as all Ghanaians interested in upholding our constitution and democracy to endure all circumstances including possible long queues, potential intimidation and harsh weather in order to confirm their names on the register. This is how we would all guarantee victory on December 7, 2020 we can rescue our dear nation from this insensitive Akufo Addo’s government.

    Source: The Herald

  • Voters exhibition exercise records low turn out in Dzorwulu

    There has been a low turnout in the commencement of the voter exhibition exercise by the Electoral Commission (EC) in Dzorwulu, Accra.

    The exercise, conducted by the electoral body comes after the compilation of a new voters register across the country, in June this year, ahead of the December 2020 elections.

    When GhanaWeb visited four exhibition centers in the area on Friday, September 18, 2020, the news team, at the time of the visit, witnessed very low turnout for the exercise.

    In an interaction with an Exhibition Official at the Dzorwulu High School center, Pamela Nettey, said only two applicants had come to verify their details in the provisional register.

    Another at the Dzorwulu Primary School centre, Ericka Noveiku said only seven applicants out of some 687 names in the provisional register had visited the centre to verify their names.

    Meanwhile, at the Kings of Kings centre also in Dzorwulu, Bernard Kabutey, an Exhibition Official said only two applicants had been to the centre but was optimistic the number will increase as the day goes by.

    Prior to the exhibition exercise, the Electoral Commission of Ghana (EC) announced that all voters who cannot make it to various registration centres to partake in the exhibition of the voters register can do so via a shortcode, 1422.

    This was in line with COVID-19 safety protocols to curtail the spread of the virus during the exercise.

    All eligible applicants who will make use of this process would be charged 30 pesewas while voters who are fraught with challenges while accessing the shortcode would have to immediately go to their assigned polling stations for their details to be verified.

    The aim of the exhibition of the voters register is to afford voters the opportunity to either correct the wrong spelling of their names, take a new photograph if the one on the Identification (ID) Card was badly taken among others.

    The exercise will also to provide room for a voter to object the names of unqualified persons on the register.

    The exhibition exercise will last for eight days and will begin from September 18-25, 2020 from 7am to 6pm at all 33,367 centres across the country.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Registered voters to pay 30 pesewas for verification check – EC

    The Electoral Commission of Ghana (EC) has announced that all voters who cannot make it to various registration centres to partake in the exhibition of the voters’ register which commences tomorrow, September 18 can do so via this short code, 1422.

    All voters who will make use of this process would be charged 30 pesewas.

    “The Commission will deploy a mobile telephony system also known as the SMS to allow prospective voters to check their details using their mobile phones for a fee of 30 pesewas. Prospective voters may access this system by simply texting his or her voters ID card number to 1422 and immediately, his or her details will pop up. With this simple process a voter with the click of the button can obtain the following details; his or name, voters ID card number, age, gender, polling station code, polling station name, district and region”.

    The charge, the EC Chair, Jean Mensa explained was not to enrich the Commission but the charges go directly to the telecommunications network for their services rendered.

    However, if voters are fraught with challenges while accessing the shortcode, they would have to immediately go to their assigned polling stations for their problems to be looked at.

    The aim of the exhibition of the voters’ register is to give voters the opportunity to correct the wrong spelling of their names, take a new photograph if the one on the ID card was badly taken among others.

    It is also to give room for a voter to object the names of unqualified persons on the register.

    The exhibition exercise will take place every day including weekends from 7 am to 6 pm at all 33,367 centres across the country.

    She said this at the weekly ‘Let the citizens know’ press conference held in Accra Thursday.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • EC introduces short code for voter verification

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has introduced a short message service (SMS) platform to enable registered voters access their registration details.

    The short code, 1422, will be activated on Friday, September 18, to Friday, September 25, 2020.

    To access registration details, voters would have to text their voter ID card number to the short code.

    The exhibition of the voters register would commence on Friday, September 18, to Friday, September 25.

    The exercise would also help the EC rid the register of unqualified persons ahead of the December 7 polls.

    The EC provisionally registered 16,963,306 people at the end of the biometric voters registration exercise which ended on August 9, this year.

    Source: graphic.com.gh

  • NPP supporter shot during voter registration exercise at Nkrankwanta laid to rest

    The mortal remains of a member of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Kofi Stephen aka Kofi Labet, was laid to rest on Saturday, August 29, 2020, at Nkrankwanta in the Dormaa West Constituency.

    The deceased who met his untimely demise at the Dormaa West office of the Electoral Commission (EC) was laid to rest at the Nkrankwanta Royal Cemetery.

    Present to pay their last respect included the Bono Regional Executives led by Mr. Kwame Baffoe, Minister for Lands And Natural Resources, Lawyer Kwaku Asomah-Cheremeh, Deputy Aviation Minister and MP for Jaman South, Yaw Afful, MP for Dormaa West, Ali Maiga and sympathisers of both the New Patriotic Party(NPP) and the National Democratic Congress(NDC).

    Addressing the well-wishers, the Bono Regional Secretary of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) Kofi Ofosu Boateng charged party members not to feel downhearted by the death of their colleague.

    He urged them to continue the good fight in the interest of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) as that is what the deceased stood and fought for.

    “Today is a sad day as we bid a farewell to one of our hardworking party members who fell in the line of duty. He is gone but we cannot give up as we have to continue the battle in his memory so that his death will not be in vain.”

    He entreated party members to remain calm, bury their differences and leave in unity and harmony with their colleagues on the other side despite the circumstances surrounding the death of their colleague as that is what the NPP stands for.

    Kofi Stephen lost his life on August 11, 2020, following clashes between supporters of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) and the National Democratic Congress (NDC).
    He was allegedly shot by one of the security personnel at the District EC office at Nkrankwanta.

    He left behind a wife and two children.

    Meanwhile, eight suspects who were arrested in connection with the confusion have been granted bail by the Wamfie Magistrate Court to reappear on September 15.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Voter registration of 18 persons in NJSM cancelled

    The New Juaben South Municipal Voters Registration Review Committee (VRRC) has cancelled the registration of 18 persons who were challenged at the just ended voter registration exercise organized by the Electoral Commission.

    The registration of the 18 people were challenged for being minors and non-residents in the Municipality.

    This was disclosed by Mr Kofi Asante Owusu, the NJSM Director of the Electoral Commission (EC) in an interview with the Ghana News Agency at Koforidua in the Eastern Region.

    He said 92,444 eligible voters were registered in the Municipality during the voters registration exercise.

    Mr Owusu said the registered voters consisted of 44,305 males and 48,139 females.

    He indicated that 86,844 registered at various polling stations in the Municipality, 1,384 registered at schools, while 3,482 registered at the district office and 694 from the two-day mop-up exercise.

    He said the municipal office of the EC also registered 407 persons with disabilities.

    Source: GNA

  • Voter registration: Expedite probe into cause of violence Peace Council

    The National Peace Council (NPC) has called on the police to quicken the investigations being conducted into the circumstances that led to the violence associated with the just-ended voters registration exercise.

    The Council in a statement to the Inspector General of Police said there was the need to speed up the investigations in order to forestall the problem from recurring.

    There were isolated cases of violence during the registration exercise.

    The two main political parties, the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP) and the main opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), traded accusations among themselves regarding who caused the violence.

    But the NPC believes that the investigations will unravel the cause of the violence.

    “The NPC encourages the Ghana Police Service and, particularly, the Inspector General of Police to expedite action regarding ongoing investigations into all the criminal matters which came up during the registration exercise,” the Council said in a statement.

    Source: 3 News

  • NDC, NPP parliamentary candidates satisfied with voter registration exercise

    Parliamentary candidates of the two main political parties in the Ketu South Municipality have described the just ended Voter Registration Exercise as largely successful.

    Madam Abla Dzifa Gomashie, the National Democratic Congress (NDC) parliamentary candidate, and Mr David Tiahno Quarshie, the New Patriotic Party (NPP) candidate for Ketu South, said the exercise had been without ugly incidents and commended the Electoral Commission for a peaceful registration.

    Speaking to the Ghana News Agency (GNA) the political rivals shared their impression on the exercise, which sought to compile a new electoral roll ahead of the general election in December.

    Madam Gomashie expressed gratitude to the citizenry for defying the odds to go out to register and noted that though the exercise was successful she had some reservations.

    She said the centre for the mop-up was too far from the communities making it difficult for some people to commute to the office to register.

    “Again, logistics including chairs and canopies needed for the smooth running of the exercise created a challenge and should be addressed going forward,” she said.

    “I am happy for the people of Ghana, Volta Region and especially Ketu South for coming out to register in their numbers in these extraordinary times. Neither the fear of COVID-19, the harassments, intimidation and the challenge forms stopped them from coming out.”

    Mr Quarshie said he was satisfied with the overall conduct of the registration exercise and debunked claims of intimidation, harassment and tagging of residents as foreigners in the Municipality.

    He called on the people of the Volta Region, especially those in Ketu South, to disregard the so-called “Togolese tag” on them because the current government did not consider them as such.

    Mr Kofi Sakyi Boampong, the Municipal Director of the Electoral Commission, said the process was successful and the office did not intentionally leave out any eligible applicant.

    “Any eligible applicant desirous of registering for the voter card would have done so within the regular and the mop-up period. The office made efforts to communicate the gazetted schedules to the public in a bid to inform them to participate in the exercise,” he said.

    The exercise, which ended on Sunday, had 139,100 applicants in Ketu South registering out of which about 800 applicants had their registration challenged.

    Source: GNA

  • New voters register: 60.09 percent used Ghana Card; Total registered voters is 16,963,306

    The Electoral Commission has announced that a total of 16,963,306 voters have been registered in the mass voter registration exercise which ended last week.

    These provisional figures were announced Wednesday by the Chairperson of the Electoral Commission, Mrs Jean Mensa at a press conference in Accra.

    She explained that the figure is pending processes of de-duplication and adjudication.

    More women registered

    At the end of the registration exercise, a total 51.73 percent females were registered while males made up of 48.27 percent were registered.

    The Upper East Region recorded the highest number of female registrants per population with 54.6 percent and the Western Region had the highest number of male registrants per population with 51.2 percent.

    First time voters  

    At the end of the exercise, 762,944 18-year-olds had registered as first time voters.

    This, the EC chairperson said represented 4.5 percent of the total register.

    With respect to 19-year-olds, the EC said 612,104 registered to bring the total number of 18 and 19-year-olds to 1,375,048 persons representing 8.1 percent of the total register.

    Documents presented

    Out of the over 16 million registered, 60.09 percent presented the Ghana Card, 37.99 percent used the guarantor system and 1.92 percent registered with the Ghana passport. 

    The region with the highest persons who used the Ghana Card is the Oti Region, where 79.1 percent presented the Ghana Card followed by the Eastern Region where 78.5 percent presented the Ghana Card. 

    The Western North Region came third with 76.9 percent using the Ghana Card.

    Guarantor system

    With the guarantor system the Upper East Region recorded the highest number with 58.5 percent followed by Bono and Ahafo regions where 57.7 percent used the guarantor system.

    Without finger prints

    The number of applicants registered without finger prints and would be verified on election day using the facial recognition feature are 61,995 representing 0.37 percent of the total number of registered voters.

    The Upper East Region had the highest number of this class of applicants with a total of 9244 found to have problematic finger prints.

    The region with the lowest number of this problem was the Ahafo Region which had a total of 813 persons with problematic finger prints.

    Challenge cases

    The EC Chairperson said a total of 37,762 cases representing 0.20 percent of the total register were challenged with majority of them in the Oti Region followed by the Ahafo and Volta Regions.

    Most of the challenge cases were from the border regions, she said.

    Minors

    The Electoral Commission noted that it has become aware that some minors have found their way unto the register and that it was confident that the challenge process which was still ongoing in various districts will help rid the register of these “illegal” persons.

    Mrs Mensa said the number of persons registered as of the end of Day 36 were 16,932,492 and at the end of the two day mop-up exercise, 30,814 persons successfully registered to bring the total to 16,963,306.

    Source: Graphic.com.gh

  • Regional breakdown of ECs just ended registration exercise

    Provisional figures as announced today, Wednesday, August 12, 2020, by the Electoral Commission put the total number of persons who registered in the just voter registration exercise at 16,963,306.

    It includes the 30,814 persons registered during the two-day mop-up registration exercise organised over the weekend.

    Chairperson of the Electoral Commission, Jean Mensa, said the figure is pending processes of deduplication and adjudication.

    She expects the figure to drop after these processes.

    “The process of deduplication and adjudication, which are currently going will flag multiple registrations in the system,” she said.

    “Additionally, the challenge system put in place during the registration and exhibition exercise will further flag unqualified voters on the register,” Jean Mensa noted further.

    The EC chairperson is confident that the upcoming processes “will contribute to the cleaning of the register and ensure its integrity and credibility ahead of the 2020 election.”

    The Greater Accra Region had the most registered voters with 3,509,805 persons.

    The Ashanti Region followed with 3,013,856 persons, Eastern Region with 1,628,108 persons and the Central Region with 1,566,061 persons.

    The commission last week announced that there were close to 800,000 persons “quarantined” on multiple registrations and exceptions list.

    It has put in place an Adjudication Committee to manually determine cases of duplicated voter registrations.

    Below is the regional breakdown of voters registered by the Electoral Commission:

    S/NREGIONNO. OF VOTERS
    1.GREATER ACCRA3,509,805
    2.ASHANTI3,013,856
    3.EASTERN1,628,180
    4.CENTRAL1,566,061
    5.WESTERN1,185,315
    6.NORTHERN1,047,539
    7.VOLTA929,322
    8.UPPER EAST653,730
    9.BONO648,408
    10.BONO EAST592,015
    11.UPPER WEST470,271
    12.WESTERN NORTH465,444
    13.OTI353,492
    14.AHAFO315,827
    15.SAVANNAH295,648
    16.NORTH EAST288,393

    Source: citinewsroom

  • 2020 Elections: Greater Accra region leads with the most registered voters

    The Electoral Commission (EC) says the Greater Accra Region had the most registered voters in the just ended voters registration.

    The EC says the region recorded 3,590,805 persons out of the 16.9 million people who registered across the country.

    According to the Commission, the Ashanti Region followed with 3,013,856 persons while the Eastern Region recorded 1,628,108 persons and the Central Region recording 1,566,061 persons.

    Addressing journalists at the Let the Citizens Know’ series on Wednesday, August 12, EC Chairperson, Jean Mensa said it has in total registered 16,963,306 persons in 38 days at the end of the exercise.

    “At the end of the 36-day, exercise 16,932,492 persons had registered as voters. At the end of the mop-up exercise, 30,814 persons successfully registered as part of the 2020 voters registration exercise. The total number of registered voters at the end of the exercise stands at 16,963,306,” she stated.

    For first time voters who are classified above 18 years old, the EC said it has registered 762,944 persons. This figure, according to the Commission represents 4.5% of the total voter roll.

    “To go a little deeper, 612,104 19 year-olds also registered as voters. In a nutshell, the total number of 18 and 19-year olds’ who had registered at the end of the exercise amount to 1,375,048. This figure represents 8.1 percent of the total register,” Jean Mensa explained.

    The compilation of a new voters register by the Electoral Commission (EC) commenced on June 30, 2020, and ended on August 6, 2020, across all districts in the country.

    Although the EC projected registering 15 million eligible voters, the latest figures show the electoral body has surpassed its projections.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • EC investigates alleged registration of foreigners at Banda Kabrono

    The Electoral Commission has initiated investigations into an alleged registration of some foreigners said to be Ivoriens at Banda Kabrono during the mass voter registration exercise last week.

    According to a statement issued by the EC [copy attached below] on Saturday, August 8, 2020, its initial investigation has revealed that the said registration occurred at Banda Kabrono in the Bono Region.

    “As a commission determined to compile a register, which reflects eligible Ghanaians only, we take this matter very seriously,” the EC’s statement posted on Facebook said.

    “The Commission has launched a full scale investigation into the matter and will not shield any staff (permanent or temporary) found to have been involved in the alleged illegal registration of foreign nationals. The Commission will use all legal means available to it to ensure that the names of all ineligible persons are removed from Ghana’s voters register,” it added.

     

    The EC called on the security agencies to collaborate with the commission in this regard.

     

    Meanwhile, the commission entreats all well-meaning Ghanaians to report illegal and unauthorised activities of any EC to the commission and the security agencies.

    “We assure the general public that we are determined to compile a register that reflects eligible Ghanaians only. We will continue to work to ensure that the 2020 Voters Register bears the hallmark of credibility and integrity.


    Alleged foreigners sent to Sunyani

    Graphic Online’s correspondent in the Bono Region, Emmanuel Adu-Gyamerah reports from Sunyani that officials of the Ghana Immigration Service (GIS) have arrested 52 foreign nationals who reportedly sneaked into the Banda District to take part in the mass voters registration exercise.

    They reportedly registered on August 6, 2020, the last day of the mass exercise at various registration centres in the Banda District.

    They were picked up by the security officers on Friday, August 7, 2020 whilst they were trying to return to their base at Tambe in Cote d’Ivoire after obtaining their voters identity cards, reports Adu-Gyamerah.

    They were on board a KIA truck with registration number, ER 4612- X and were arrested by the Immigration officers at Drobo in the Jaman North District at about 6.00 am.

    They have since been transported to Sunyani to be screened by officials of the GIS.

     

    Source: Graphic.com.gh 

  • EC investigating alleged illegal registration of Ivorians

    The Electoral Commission (EC) says it is collaborating with the respective security agencies to investigate the alleged illegal registration of some Ivorians in the ongoing voters registration exercise.

    A statement copied to the Ghana News Agency said the initial investigation revealed that the said registration occurred at Banda Kabrono in the Bono Region.

    “As a Commission determined to compile a register, which reflects eligible Ghanaians only, we take this matter very seriously. The Commission has launched a full scale investigation into the matter, and will not shield any staff (permanent or temporary )found to have been involved in the alleged illegal registration of foreign nationals,” it said.

    The statement said the Commission would use all legal means to ensure that the names of all ineligible persons were removed from Ghana’s Voters Register.

    It called on all well-meaning Ghanaians to report illegal and unauthorized activities of any EC official to the Commission and the Security Agencies.

    The statement stressed, “we are determined to compile a register that reflects eligible Ghanaians only. We will continue to work to ensure that the 2020 Voters Register bears the hallmark of credibility and integrity.“

    Source: GNA

  • Thick crowd at New Juaben South Municipal registration center for mop-up

    Brows are highly raised as scores of voter applicants have thronged the New Juaben South Municipal office of the Electoral Commission to have their names imprinted in the new voter register.

    The Electoral Commission, as part of the compilation of the new voter register, has set aside two additional days for a mop-up exercise to allow all who could not register to be voters in the 2020 general elections to do so.

    The mop-up exercise commences on Saturday August 8 and ends on Sunday August 9, 2020.

    Many were those who thought only a few applicants would turn up for the mop up exercise but the situation at the New Juaben South office of the EC displays the opposite.

    As early as 6am, a thick crowd of registrants were already in queue even before registration officials arrived to set up the center for the registration exercise.

    A near brawl between supporters of the two major political parties in the country – NPP and NDC – as they exchanged heated words in bid to prevent each other from bussing applicants to the center.

    As at the time Ghanaweb Eastern Regional Correspondent got to the registration center for the mopup exercise at around 2pm, the queue was still long and uncountable persons standing around the registration center premises amidst a heavy security presence.

    Ghanaweb gathered that a total of 10 applicants had been challenged on premise that those applicants were either non-residents of the New Juaben South Municipality or were underaged.

    Despite the storm of applicants and political party faithfuls, the heavily built security men and women had been able to maintain order at the registration center.

    Some of the personalities seen at the center included the New Juaben South Municipal Chief Executive, Isaac Apaw-Gyasi and the Parliamentary candidate for the NPP, Michael Okyere Baafi, who doubles as the Executive Secretary of the Ghana Free Zones Authority.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • 2020 polls: 61,000 voters with poor fingerprints to go through facial verification

    The Electoral Commission has said some 61,086 voters who were part of those captured in the just-ended registration exercise, fall under the trauma category meaning, their fingerprints could not be captured by the electronic system.

    This means, they would have to go through facial verification on the day of the general elections before they can vote.

    At a press conference in Accra on Friday, 7 August 2020, the Deputy Chair of the EC, Dr Eric Bossman Asare, said: “In the course of the registration, the Commission identified some applicants who have lost most or some of their finger imprints, making it extremely difficult for their fingerprints to be captured for verification purposes”.

    “The reasons for this are several but they are largely rooted in the kinds of occupations of some applicants”, he noted.

    “For these applicants, their faces will be verified during the election to establish their identities”, he said.

    He added: “This is the facial recognition that the Commission has been talking about”.

    In both real and nominal terms, Dr Asare said the Upper East region leads with 9,137 cases constituting 1.42% of the total voters registered.

    He said with the exception of Ahafo, all the regions are in four digits.

    Regional breakdown

    WESTERN – 2,742

    WESTERN NORTH – 1,224

    CENTRAL – 2,484

    GREATER ACCRA – 7,092

    VOLTA – 5,873

    OTI – 1,586

    EASTERN – 3,162

    ASHANTI – 7,625

    BONO – 3,009

    AHAFO – 799

    BONO EAST – 2,802

    SAVANNAH – 3,045

    NORTHERN – 4,632

    NORTH EAST – 1,557

    UPPER EAST – 9,137

    UPPER WEST – 4,317

    NATIONAL TOTAL – 61,086

    Source: Class FM

  • 61,000 voters with poor fingerprints to go through facial verification

    The Electoral Commission has said some 61,086 voters who were part of those captured in the just-ended registration exercise, fall under the trauma category meaning, their fingerprints could not be captured by the electronic system.

    This mean, they would have to go through facial verification on the day of the general elections before they can vote.

    At a press conference in Accra on Friday, 7 August 2020, the Deputy Chair of the EC, Dr Eric Bossman Asare, said: “In the course of the registration, the Commission identified some applicants who have lost most or some of their finger imprints, making it extremely difficult for their fingerprints to be captured for verification purposes”.

    “The reasons for this are several but they are largely rooted in the kinds of occupations of some applicants”, he noted.

    “For these applicants, their faces will be verified during the election to establish their identities”, he said.

    He added: “This is the facial recognition that the Commission has been talking about”.

    In both real and nominal terms, Dr Asare said the Upper East region leads with 9,137 cases constituting 1.42% of the total voters registered.

    He said with the exception of Ahafo, all the regions are in four digits.

    Regional breakdown

    WESTERN – 2,742

    WESTERN NORTH – 1,224

    CENTRAL – 2,484

    GREATER ACCRA – 7,092

    VOLTA – 5,873

    OTI – 1,586

    EASTERN – 3,162

    ASHANTI – 7,625

    BONO – 3,009

    AHAFO – 799

    BONO EAST – 2,802

    SAVANNAH – 3,045

    NORTHERN – 4,632

    NORTH EAST – 1,557

    UPPER EAST – 9,137

    UPPER WEST – 4,317

    NATIONAL TOTAL – 61,086

     

    Source: ClassFM 

  • EC reveals 30,462 prospective voters still on the waiting list

    A total of 30,462 persons who turned up at various registration centres to have their names captured on Ghana’s electoral roll have their fate still hanging in the balance.

    This is because political party agents have challenged their eligibility to be on the voters register for the December 7, 2020 elections.

    The Deputy Chairman of the EC in charge of Corporate Services, Dr Bossman Eric Asare, stated this at the eighth edition of Let the Citizen Know in Accra on Friday, August 7, 2020.

    He, has however, said the development is not a reinvention of the wheel since it is it is in compliance with Regulation 18 of Constitutional Instrument (C.I.) governing the registration exercise.

    He said the number of the challenged cases per population were quite higher in border constituencies.

    The mass registration exercise ended on Thursday, August 6, capturing 16,663,669.

    Source: graphic.com.gh