The final register for this year’s election. You can check your name, polling station, your number on the name reference list to avoid delay during the voting day. Open the link below https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=16J2Pm9RNIkMcFRVAJP-RBWPdNvVxVQLS 2. From there you select your region in which you registered from. 3. Then you select the constituency you registered your voters id from. 4. Then select your voting centre and then check out your name voters ID number, the page number where your name can be found from the the voters register on December, 7th 2020 and your age. 5. So on the day of voting just go and mention your page number and your name will be identified for you do cast your vote fast and go home. We urge all registered voters to come out on 7th December and peacefully exercise their civic duty. Apexnewsgh.com/Ghana Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications
Splitting of Some centers have created about 5,000 plus centers- Dr. Serebour Quarcoe
The Director of Electoral Service, Dr. Serebour Quarcoe at the Electoral Commission (EC) has disclosed in an interview with Citi News which was monitored by Apexnewsgh.com that the commission wants to reduce the queuing at the polling stations. According to Dr. Quarcoe, the Commission had decided to put the threshold at 749. He said any center that is more than that will be split. “…so, there are some centers that have been split into five. Some are four, three, and two. The splitting has created about 5,000 plus centers. So, there are no new centers. The splitting is around the whole country but mostly in areas that are densely populated,” he stated. However, the newly added polls have seen the number of polling stations ballooned to 38,000 polling stations across the country. Meanwhile, the Chairperson of the Commission, Jean Mensa has assured Parliament that her outfit is 95 percent ready for the successful, credible, fair, and peaceful conduct of the election on December 7, 2020. Following the misconception in the public domain that she disrespected the house by not honoring their earlier invitation, Madam Jean Mensa said, It is important to emphasize that this is the first time she has been invited by the House in her capacity as the EC Chairperson of the Electoral Commission, and she has on no occasion turned down an invitation from the Parliament of Ghana. Apexnewsgh.com/Ghana/Ngamegbulam Chidozie Stephen Please kindly contact Apexnewsgh.com on email:apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications.
32,621 names on the voter register do not represent unique individuals- EC Chair
Madam Jean Mensa has clarified that the 32,621 names on the voter register do not represent unique individuals who have found their names onto the register but rather the number of times multiple registrations or a breach occurred. The EC Chair made the revelation when she appeared in Parliament on Saturday, November 7, 2020, to brief members of the house on their preparations ahead of December 7. Meanwhile, the Commission was invited to appear before the House on Thursday, November 5 but failed to show up. It was also revealed by Madam EC Chair, that Fifty-one (51) persons, who initially challenged the Electoral Commission’s decision to erase their names from the 2020 voters register in court due to various alleged irregularities, have had their names reinstated on the register. According to her, the 51 were part of a multiples and exceptions’ list with over 32,000 applicants. Clarifying further, Madam Jean Mensah explained that the 32,621 do not represent unique individuals whose names were found on the register but rather the number of times multiple registrations or a breach transpired. However, appearing before the House, Madam Mensa gave an account of the total cost on the new voting system already acquired for the conduct of its activities, stressing that only a part payment has been made to the vendors for the main time. She was confident that the infrastructure deployed mainly the biometric registration kits, verification kits, the software, and the data centers are working effectively. On the issues regarding voter register, Madam Mensa said a total of 17,029,971 unique individuals were registered after the process, which started on Tuesday, June 30, and 32,621 were put on a list of multiples (18,619) and exceptions (14,002) for a variety of illegal practices including under-aged registration. Apexnewsgh.com/ Ngamegbulam Chidozie Stephen Please kindly contact Apexnewsgh.com on email:apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications.
Ghana can’t have peaceful elections when citizens are not committed to peace – EC
The Greater Accra Regional Director of the Electoral Commission (EC), says Ghana cannot have peaceful elections when citizens’ actions and inactions do not show their commitment to ensuring peace. According to Mr George Kwame Amoah, it is essential that Ghanaians are tolerant of each other and respect the choice of others in elections. “This will help us prevent attacks, insults, and intimidation among others, which are creeping into the country’s politics,” he said during the launch of Agents of Peace Campaign. His comments come after some NPP and NDC members attacked each other after a peace walk at Odododiodio in Accra. Mr Amoah speaking during the launch by the Church of Pentecost Kaneshie Area, on the theme: “Seek Peace and Pursue It” described the violence as “horrible”. He stated it was proper to allow political parties to have the freedom to a campaign since Ghana chose the path of democracy. People should have the opportunity to freely choose candidates or parties they were comfortable with, he added. Mr Amoah said, “peace is invaluable, don’t take it for granted. Countries who lost peace took many years to get it back. We need to pursue peace even after elections.” Ghana cannot afford to lose the peace her citizens are enjoying, he noted. The members of the church present also took the opportunity to pray for the upcoming elections, political parties and security agencies among others. The launch was characterised by patriotic songs, poetry recitals, and a documentary on some incidences of electoral violence and their effects. The campaign is expected to be replicated in 87 local assemblies within the Church’s 22 districts. Mr Amoah commended the Church for the campaign and appealed to the conscience of the people on the need to sustain the peace. The Deputy Greater Accra Regional Minister, Mrs Elizabeth Sackey, urged all to “walk the talk of peace” and desist from paying lip service to it. The Greater Accra Regional Director of the National Commission for Civic Education, Mrs. Lucille Hewlett Annan, noted that it would be difficult for people to enjoy their rights if there was no peace. She appealed to citizens to resort to arbitration, litigation, mediation and alternative dispute resolution mechanisms instead of war to address their grievances. The Kaneshie Area Head of the Church of Pentecost, Apostle Mike Etrue, appealed to the youth to avoid being used as instruments of violence. “The youth should not build their muscles in violence but must build faith muscle for peace,” he said. He appealed to political leaders to seek peace because that remained paramount in Ghana’s democracy and development. GNA Please, kindly contact Apexnewsgh on email: apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible publications.
Why can’t we improve upon what we do? Yaw Gyampo questioned
1. Voter Register Exhibition exercise has been undertaken since 1992 and the challenges being experienced today have always been experienced. Every time there is exhibition, names get missing in a manner that portrays the Electoral Commission as staffed with people who are virtually non-receptive to learning. This is the truth in plain language. Every Election Day, there will be late start of polls somewhere. Every Election Day, there will be shortage of polling materials and machine malfunction somewhere. Every exhibition process is characterized by missing names. Why? Don’t we learn? Can’t we improve upon what we do? Must we always explain the challenges instead of dealing with them? 2. Is it that the Commission has an incompetent tradition that shapes the conduct and performance of its staff and appointees? I ask this because some of the challenges of the Commission, including that of voter register exhibition, have been there from the days of Justice Josiah Ofori Boateng, the first chair of Ghana’s Election Management Body. 3. To my mind, a Commission that allows such repetitive challenges to saddle its work, does a great disservice to its mandate and perpetuate the oppositional mistrust that greets its activities all the time. The Commission must aim at achieving a level of maturity and professionalism, where these repetitive challenges would be reduced to the barest minimum. 4. My checks with some officials at the Commission show that apart from the current plague of relational incompetence of the EC in dealing with its stakeholders, especially, the opposition, the limited time frame within which to conduct the upcoming elections, and some level of incompetence or sabotage by some EC staff, have caused the embarrassment. The Commission is very much aware of these and must forcefully explain to Ghanaians, as no one can understand and explain the issues better than they themselves. For now, their explanations have been economical, in my view. 5. The Commission must develop a relational competence in its dealing with political parties and must ring-fence itself from the partisan support of political parties in power. They are have what it takes to defend themselves and hence must openly reject the partisan support of every ruling party. Indeed, the party in government must also lift the bar of partisan politics a little, by allowing the EC to fight its own battles and critiquing the Commission when necessary. For, it cannot be true that the EC is infallible to warrant praise-singing and support at all times. It must be added that once the ruling party continue to serve as the mouthpiece of the Commission, it will naturally be difficult for the opposition to trust the Commission. 6. In dealing with the opposition, the idea of relational competence will dictate that it may not always about be helpful for the Commission to only be interested in asserting its mandate. A complex balance and synthesis must be found between mandate assertion, and consensual-conciliatory way of working with groups, without which, there will be no mandate to assert. Sometimes, just a phone call to influential people in the opposition, to explain challenges and to show willingness to work together to address them, will douse tension and reduce mistrust. 7. But those who have problems with the EC now, should also be measured in their outbursts and threats. This is because the history of the Fourth Republic show that their tone and language about the EC, will change when they win power, and suddenly, all the challenges of the EC identified by them, will vanish after the political kingdom has been given them. 8. In assuring the public that no registered voter who has an ID Card will be disenfranchised, the Commission must also work through it’s Eminent Advisory Body, to iron out its differences with the political parties, particularly, the opposition. The Commission must do this for its own institutional peace, as it conducts the remaining processes towards the upcoming elections. 9. Those hired staff of the Commission whose incompetence and, or sabotage brought this embarrassment, must be brought to book by the EC. Machines won’t work to perfection when there is sabotage, or not too qualified people operate them. 10. As for the timing, it is now too late. The EC must rush the processes and we must brace ourselves for the implications of such rush. That’s why the contrary view for a new voter register in the immediate period leading to our major election of 2020, shouldn’t have been brushed aside an initio. Yaw Gyampo A31, Prabiw PAV Ansah Street Saltpond & Suro Nipa House Kubease Larteh-Akuapim Apexnewsgh.com/Ghana









