Ghana’s Electoral Commission has disclosed that it has complied with the
Supreme court’s order to delete over 56,000 names from the current
voters register.
The courts’ order was necessitated by the fact that the particular
persons had registered with a card that was not legally valid for the
purpose. The deletions are in respect of persons who used the country’s
National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) cards as proof of their Ghanaian citizenship in the last registration exercise.
The Commission announced that it had deleted the names of some
56,772 earlier this week, however, in a list making the rounds in local
media circles, the EC captures 56,900 names of NHIS card registrants.
The deletion of the NHIS card registrants
is in conformity with a directive by the Supreme Court following a
protracted impasse over the credibility of the voters register ahead of
the 2016 elections.
The ruling followed a suit filed by two political players, one Abu
Ramadan and Evans Nimako, who in 2014 won a lawsuit that barred the use
of NHIS cards for registration.
The court subsequently ordered the EC to produce a list of all persons who registered with the ‘invalid’ cards.
Ghana’s Judiciary and Elections
The judiciary, Ghana’s third arm of government is largely seen as
the last stop with regards to electoral issues. It has over the years
presided over cases of disagreement after polls.
The very recent, perhaps its biggest contribution to the advancement
of Ghana’s electoral system was in 2013 when it heard a landmark
election petition that was presented to it by the leading opposition New
Patriotic Party (NPP) which alleged that the 2012 polls were rigged.
A panel of judges who sat in a televised process that spanned over
eight months probing several witnesses including the electoral
commissioner at the time. In the end, the court affirmed the victory of
incumbent John Dramani Mahama but gave directions for key changes to the
electoral system.
Ghana’s electoral commission
Ghana’s electoral system has won global acclaim for organizing
elections over the years, starting 1992 when the west African country
transited from military rule and adopted the current constitution.
The EC has under its belt, six general elections that has seen the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) winning four times whiles the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) has won two.
The upcoming elections, its seventh is seen as a straight contest between the president and the NPP’s Nana Addo Danquah Akuffo Addo.
Africanews
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