Audio By Carbonatix
The Electoral Commission has re-assured that the Ghanaians it is working around the clock to meet its statutory obligations of conducting the 2008 Election to avoid any constitutional crisis.
The postponement of the voters’ registration exercise should not be misconstrued that the EC is incapable of carrying out the polls.
Mr David Kangah, a deputy Chairman at the EC in charge of Finance and Administration, who gave the assurance, said despite the unfortunate deferment of exercise, the EC was working hard to ensure free, fair and the most transparent elections.
He was addressing representatives of political parties and media practitioners at Koforidua on Friday, as part of a special regional inter-party advisory committee forum on building stakeholders’ confidence on the outcome of the 2008 polls.
It was being organised by the EC in conjunction with the KAB Governance Consult and the Friedrich Ebert Foundation.
Mr Kangah said the assertion by some people that the EC might not be able to conduct the December 7 polls on schedule was far-fetched.
He said the EC did not intend to create crisis since it was aware of the problems such a development might create for the country.
Mr Kangah asked Ghanaians to discard suspicions on the operations of the EC and said sufficient regulatory safeguards have been established to prevent manipulation of the elections.
He said the suspicion sometimes stemmed from the failure of political parties to avail their supporters of the rules governing the “game” and rather focus more on unsubstantiated rumours.
Mr Kwadwo Sarfo Kantanka, deputy chairman of the EC in charge of Operations, said Ghana’s electoral system had integrity and thrived on consultations and deliberations.
He asked political parties to educate their members on election rules and the art of policing the electoral process.
Representatives of the political parties asked the EC to provide adequate logistics to electoral offices in the regions.
They complained that during the recent card replacing exercise, some districts did not have functional vehicles and had to rely on the benevolence of other government agencies to carry-out the exercise.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
‘At the age of 12, I was teaching people and collecting money from them’ – Forty Under 40 Awards
4 minutes -
I broke my virginity at the age of 26 after university – Richard Abbey Jnr.
36 minutes -
Sacked for fees, saved by faith: The untold story of Forty Under 40 Awards founder Richard Abbey Jnr
1 hour -
GCB Bank surges GH¢0.45, ETI gains GH¢0.06 as GSE ends week higher
2 hours -
Two teens jailed 55 years for robbery
2 hours -
UDS demands apology for MPhil student wrongly branded as Tamale robber
3 hours -
“We don’t sell fish!” – Tema Shipyard CEO hits back over dead fish discovery
3 hours -
Sam George defends anti-LGBTQ+ Bill as ‘national priority’ amid debate over gov’t focus
4 hours -
Artemis II astronauts safely back on Earth after trip around moon
4 hours -
Sam George unveils massive 1,150-cell site rollout to end network woes
4 hours -
This Saturday on Prime Insight: Fuel levy suspension, LGBTQ+ legislation, and Damang Mine controversy
5 hours -
Struggling Real suffer title blow with Girona draw
5 hours -
Mahama nominates Pamela Graham as Auditor-General
6 hours -
The five big sticking points in US-Iran talks
7 hours -
Melania Trump’s speech propels Epstein crisis back to forefront
7 hours