Audio By Carbonatix
The Electoral Commission (EC) has destroyed over 3.6 million ballot papers intended for both the presidential and parliamentary elections in the Eastern Region.
The exercise was carried out under strict police security and was closely monitored by the two main political parties, the National Democratic Congress (NDC) and the New Patriotic Party (NPP).
This action follows the suspension of special voting in the said regions after reports emerged about leaked ballot papers.
Speaking to the media after the destruction of the ballots, the Eastern Regional Director of the EC, John Appiah expressed satisfaction with the process.
"You should observe for yourself that the exercise has been very successful. In fact, we brought all the parties together — the constituency executives from the NPP, NDC, and CPP — and they have all been here. They checked the seals on the ballot paper bags and confirmed that everything was intact before we offloaded them," he said.
"Now, we are burning them, and I must say, it was a successful and very cooperative process from day one. When we brought the ballot papers here, they followed us, checked the seals before we offloaded them, and I have spoken with them. They have agreed with the process, so we are happy with it. Once they are happy and have seen that it has been very successful, we can be confident in the outcome."
He continued, "The total number of papers, when counted leaf by leaf, was 1.8 million, which have been destroyed here, both for the presidential and parliamentary elections. For the Afram Plains and North regions, we have made provisions to ensure that the results are delivered promptly. We have hired speedboats to retrieve the results, and the Ghana Army is providing us with a chopper to airlift the materials and bring them back."
He added, "We are hopeful that everything will go smoothly this time, and we will receive the results as early as possible for declaration."
The NDC Eastern Regional Secretary, Jamal Korneh, noted that "We agreed that the ballot papers should be conveyed to the police station. When we got to the police headquarters today, they wanted to store them in the Zoomlion containers, but we disagreed with that. So, we brought everything here. So far, so good — we’ve been able to check all the seals, emptied all the bags, and proceeded with setting fire to the ballot papers that have been rejected by the EC".
He further criticised the EC’s handling of the situation, saying, "From day one, the EC has not been truthful or transparent with us; they have been playing games." He added, "They conceal information and make decisions without our knowledge, especially in this case. If you want to discard rejected ballot papers, at least communicate with our national executives so they can inform us officially. Instead, we received a WhatsApp message on their platform, which was not an official way of communicating."
"We will remain vigilant over the next three to four days leading up to the election," he assured.
Latest Stories
-
Data is the new gold — but most nations are still digging with shovels
4 minutes -
Tourism Minister pledges action on cultural infrastructure, pushes domestic tourism in Upper West
5 minutes -
“Measure success by the clinic, not the conference” — Mahama urges global health reform
13 minutes -
Charlotte Osei: Why sponsoring festivals like Oguaa Fetu Afahye is smart business
13 minutes -
“Let us not let reform be a ceiling” — Mahama calls for bold global health reforms
21 minutes -
BECE examination malpractices: Is there an end in sight?
29 minutes -
We’re not in Geneva to mourn aid cuts but to build health sovereignty — Mahama at 79th World Health Assembly
32 minutes -
Mahama calls for African ‘health sovereignty’ as global aid declines
38 minutes -
Africa cannot claim health sovereignty while producing less than 1% of vaccines — Mahama
42 minutes -
BoG undertakes new measures to strengthen financial sector – Second Deputy Governor
43 minutes -
The ‘forgotten Ghanaian fugitive with American and Ghanaian passportsÂ
50 minutes -
US aid suspension costs Ghana $78m, Mahama tells World Health Assembly
51 minutes -
Mahama touts Ghana’s free primary healthcare programme at World Health Assembly
60 minutes -
Africa must take control of its health future — Mahama
1 hour -
Ghana on alert following Ebola outbreak in Uganda and DR Congo – Ministry of Health
1 hour