Audio By Carbonatix
The Executive Director of the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA), Sulemana Braimah, has denounced the conduct of the Electoral Commission (EC) in the ongoing Limited Voter Registration exercise.
According to him, the manner in which the exercise is being conducted makes it "difficult" and "expensive" for applicants living in underdeveloped areas to participate.
The EC began a Limited Voter Registration on Tuesday, September 12, to grant new voters the opportunity to be registered onto the EC’s electoral roll ahead of the December 19, District Level Elections.
But most populace living in areas such as some villages in Pru-East municipality, say transportation fee from their place of residence to their registration centres is extremely costly.
Others have raised concern over the high risk involved in moving to the district offices, hence their unwillingness to partake in the process.
In light of these grievances, Mr Braimah stressed that the registration exercise is creating an impediment to democracy.
Speaking on JoyNews’ Newsfile, Mr Braimah said the EC’s Limited Voter Registration exercise is “just making it so difficult and so expensive for people to get involved in our democratic processes.”
He further quizzed, “Why do you want to put a price on the fundamental exercise of civic rights to vote? Why should we make people’s willingness to participate in democracy so painful, so difficult and so expensive?”
Subsequently, Mr Braimah pointed out that a large number of Ghanaian youth are losing trust in democracy due to circumstances like these.
He also condemned the EC’s conduct, asking, “ Why would the Electoral Commission which is a national institution basically refuse to listen to everyone, perhaps apart from the governing party?”
He stressed that this could undermine democracy in the country.
Mr Braimah then stressed that with the manner in which Ghanaians are consistently losing trust in the nation’s public institutions including the Electoral Commission, the EC’s conduct will make it difficult for it to gain the trust of Ghanaians.
“I don’t think that this is the way to build our democracy, I don’t think that this is the way to get the credibility and public trust that the EC so much requires and desires. I don’t think this is the way to build on the progress we have made,” he emphasised.
Mr. Braimah therefore advised the EC to start “listening to people and listening to voices of conscience,” for the betterment of Ghanaians and the country as a whole.
Latest Stories
-
Sylvester Tetteh pledges to rebuild and reposition NPP for victory in 2028
49 seconds -
No Sex, No Job: Confronting Ghana’s silent abuse of power
25 minutes -
McDan Youth Connect ignites entrepreneurship drive to tackle youth unemployment in Ghana
32 minutes -
Chinese company Huayou agrees to fund Ewoyaa mine development amid Atlantic Lithium takeover talks
2 hours -
61 out of 185 SOEs met April 30 deadline for submitting 2025 financial statements
2 hours -
Heath Goldfields to invest $20m into five-year community development plan
2 hours -
3i Africa Summit connects fintechs to investors, customers
2 hours -
GMA offers legal and mental health support to staff linked to Charles Amissah case
2 hours -
Okaikwei Central NPP executive allegedly assaulted after election meeting
2 hours -
34-year-old man arrested for alleged sexual abuse of teenage boys at Kronum
3 hours -
Improve patient communication to rebuild public trust – GMA President to health professionals
3 hours -
Roads Ministry to sponsor training for heavy equipment operators
3 hours -
Okaikwei North Assembly deploys 24-Hour taskforce to sustain Lapaz decongestion
3 hours -
GMA president questions use of ‘medical negligence’ in Charles Amissah probe report
3 hours -
GWL recovers GH₵3.7m from illegal water users as crackdown intensifies
3 hours