Audio By Carbonatix
The HRAC releases its report into the biometric registration of prisoners which took place on the 30th of May 2012. The biometric registration of the prisoners will allow them to vote in the upcoming elections in December, which is a right guaranteed them in the 1992 Ghanaian Constitution.
This was the first time that prisoners had been biometrically registered, and as such, the process had some teething problems. HRAC closely followed the process, and conducted interviews with a prison official and an election observer in order to ensure the Ghana Prisons Service and Electoral Commission maintain accountability towards the prison population of Ghana, and the Ghanaian people.
For the most part, the process appears to have been carried out to the best ability of the Ghana Prisons Service and Ghana Electoral Commission. However, many of the prisoners failed to register. In fact, in the final count, less than 1000 prisoners were actually registered to vote out of a prison population of about 13,000. As such, the report outlines some recommendations that would improve the process in the future.
The low registration was due to a number of factors, including inadequate identification and multiple identities. However, many of the prisoners chose not to register, thus forgoing their democratic right to vote. This was believed to be due to a lack of confidence in the process, and lack of knowledge of the importance of the right to vote. As a result, at the forefront of HRAC’s recommendations is improved education and sensitisation of the prisoners, both about the biometric registration process, and about Ghana’s democratic processes.
Increased openness to media scrutiny would have also improved the process, ensuring accountability and transparency, which must be key features of Ghana’s strengthening democracy. This was a vital recommendation indicated in the report.
HRAC will continue to monitor significant human rights developments and processes in Ghana, to ensure that those rights outlined in the 1992 Constitution are upheld, and Ghana maintains its commitment to international declarations and conventions to which we are a part.
Click here for the full report
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
-
NSA raises alarm over rejection of National Service Personnel by user agencies
2 minutes -
2025 JoyBusiness Review: I think the Cedi is overvalued – Joe Jackson
6 minutes -
JoyBusiness Review 2025: Joe Jackson names Ato Forson, Johnson Asiama as Men of the Year
16 minutes -
Falling inflation doesn’t mean prices are dropping — Prof. Quartey
17 minutes -
Police receive plaudits for reducing ‘landguardism’ in parts of Greater Accra Â
34 minutes -
IMF programme and strong fiscal–monetary coordination driving Ghana’s stability — Prof. Peter Quartey
36 minutes -
Kamal-Deen accuses government of constitutional breach over troop deployment to Jamaica
40 minutes -
2026 World Cup: Nketiah and Hudson-Odoi will ‘bring chaos’ to Black Stars – Derek Boateng
48 minutes -
11 Nigerian soldiers freed after 10-day detention in Burkina Faso -Ministry
52 minutes -
Livestream: Joy Business Review 2025
1 hour -
Interior Minister opens Upper West Regional Police Headquarters
1 hour -
AFCON 2025: Top 10 stars set to light up Morocco
1 hour -
AG to update Ghanaians on Ofori-Atta case, cybercrime recoveries today
2 hours -
Republic bank staff wins GHC 100,000 MTN mobilemoney “Still Me Nsaka” promo
2 hours -
MTN Mobile Money to undergo nationwide agent re-registration in 2026 to curb fraud
2 hours
