Audio By Carbonatix
The Deputy Chairperson of the Electoral Commission (EC), Dr Bossman Asare has indicated that the anomalies identified by the National Democratic Congress (NDC) on the voter register have been addressed.
According to him, all the issues of transfers have also been corrected.
“All the issues the party NDC claimed they have identified, I can assure the good people of the country that all the problems have been addressed. All the transfer anomalies that the NDC says about 243,000 people,” he said.
Speaking on JoyNews’ The Probe on Sunday, September 15, Dr Bossman explained the reason the anomalies happened.
According to him, when generating the data on voters, the system added all the transfers made from 2020, 2023 and 2024 together.
He, however, stated that the Commission has segregated this anomaly.
Asked why the Commission has not presented the corrected register to the political parties to quash the concerns raised, he said that it is still being updated but the final register to be used for the elections would be given to the political parties.
The NDC has raised concerns about some irregularities in the voter's register, declaring a nationwide demonstration against the EC on September 17 following its refusal to accept an independent audit of the register.
The calls became louder after the EC admitted that some of its district officers had transferred votes illegally without recourse to the law, an anomaly the Commission says it has corrected and penalized the officers involved.
The NDC's National Chairman, Johnson Asiedu Nketiah, announced a nationwide demonstration on September 17 against the EC over its refusal to conduct a forensic audit of the register.
The party's Presidential Candidate, John Dramani Mahama has also backed the call and charged members to go out in their numbers to EC offices for the protest.
But the EC is asking the NDC to engage in discussions to resolve any issues, rather than resorting to demonstrations, adding that demonstrations will only "cause tensions and suspicions that are unwarranted."
“The EC believes that the best way to ascertain the credibility of the 2024 voter's register is at the discussion table not on the streets. Taking to the streets will not ensure a credible register," EC insisted.
Latest Stories
-
Electronic Communications Act not meant to regulate journalists’ conduct – Inusah Fuseini
5 minutes -
GJA seeks Supreme Court intervention over alleged abuse of Cyber Laws against journalists
7 minutes -
ECG cannot operate effectively under reduced capital expenditure — Dubik Mahama warns
11 minutes -
Miracles Aboagye hints at exposing top officials in galamsey crackdown row
11 minutes -
EPA warns against excessive noise as Ghana marks International Noise Awareness Day
13 minutes -
Oti MDCEs sign contracts to kick-start 24-Hour Economy markets project
20 minutes -
Time’s up for justice? Why Ghana’s human rights “expiry date” must go
21 minutes -
GRA rolls out digital modified tax system to capture informal sector
26 minutes -
The dirty secret powering some of music’s biggest hits
36 minutes -
27th TGMA: Hits, heat and hard truths
49 minutes -
Body of drowned 20-year-old tanker attendant retrieved from Mpobi quarry pit
53 minutes -
5-year-old Miguel Ntsiful battles life-threatening brain condition as family seeks GH₵53k for urgent surgery
54 minutes -
How the TGMA Unsung stage delivered a record deal for Bosoma
58 minutes -
Lordina The Soprano to release ‘Show Me Your Glory’ with exclusive London listening
1 hour -
Manso Kaniago miners protest alleged extortion by ‘fake’ security operatives
1 hour