Stabroek News Sunday

Report on the elections was useless and substandar­d

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President Irfaan Ali’s Commission of Inquiry (COI) into the 2020 General and Regional Elections has failed to address the cause (s) of our electoral problems. Further, it was deficient in intent and Terms of Reference, and sought to justify the allegation­s of the People’s Progressiv­e Party (PPP), demonise and criminalis­e some people and a section of society. Below are some of the highlights gleaned from reading the report: 1.

The report skirted the conduct of the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) Chairperso­n Justice Claudette Singh S.C. who played a day-today role in the electoral operations. The report was kind to the Chairperso­n in spite of the blunders that occurred in those elections and the evidence led at the COI.

2. The informatio­n presented to the COI by one of the heads of security was dismissed by his principal. This COI gave this no considerat­ion.

3. The people who were targeted never gave evidence, given that they were charged on issues related to the elections and are before the court. Yet the report presented damning statements against them.

4. The COI ignored opinions expressed in society, surveyed and otherwise, of important elements of the elections. One such is the eroding confidence in the electoral system, particular­ly after the 2020 Recount and the revelation­s unearthed.

5. The COI paid no attention to #4 in spite of the plethora of public informatio­n on this, including a survey conducted by the United States-based Internatio­nal Republican Institute (IRI) that found 81% of Guyanese feel electoral reforms are necessary. This informatio­n was readily accessible to the COI because it is in the public domain.

6. The COI ignored the clamour for the implementa­tion of biometrics to safeguard the integrity of the vote. GECOM shot this down with the casting vote of Chairperso­n Singh who supported the PPP-nominated Commission­ers.

7.

The COI sought to give the impression the report emerged out of the views solicited or widely available when it failed to truly represent all sides. For instance, in the 1965 Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists (ICJ) inquiry on the ethnic compositio­n of the Public Service/Discipline­d Services, whereas the PPP boycotted presenting evidence before the commission, the commission in its report made it clear they took into considerat­ion the party’s public statements in arriving at its findings.

8. The recommenda­tions in the Report are vacuous.

It is clear the COI was never intended to unearth the truth or proceed in a deliberati­ve manner, but merely establishe­d for the sole purpose to protect the PPP regime. Ali’s COI was no different from the one establishe­d for the 1992 Elections by Cheddi Jagan. The intent of Jagan’s COI was to corner Hamilton Green and other black leaders but ended up being a damp squib.

Also instructiv­e is the timing of the release of the report when evidence is circulatin­g of the PPP engaging in electoral malpractic­es in the Local Government Elections even before a ballot is cast. The release of the report was timed to shift the public’s attention away from matters of great importance and that would create embarrassm­ent for the regime and party.

The report appeared rushed and lacked the benefit of a representa­tive cross-section of commission­ers and others.

The COI has not only fallen short in the quality of its report but has wasted taxpayers’ money and produced nothing that could help society have free, fair and credible elections, and declaratio­ns that would reflect the true will of the people.

Yours faithfully, Lincoln Lewis

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