Presidenta de CARICOM y primeros ministros del Caribe llegan a Guyana en medio de la crisis tras 9 días de las elecciones sin resultados

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Caricom inicia visita a Guyana en misión por elecciones

La presidenta de Caricom y primera ministra de Barbados, Mia Amor Mottley, encabeza este miércoles una visita oficial a Guyana con el propósito de aliviar la tensión tras las elecciones del 2 de marzo último, cuyos resultados, que no se han dado a conocer, son materia de controversia.

Como parte de la visita se reunirán con el presidente de Guyana, David Granger, el líder de la oposición Bharrat Jagdeo, líderes de otros partidos políticos, representantes de misiones de observadores y otras partes interesadas, informó Caricom Today.

La visita está catalogada como un esfuerzo por aliviar la tensión en el país y ayudar a llegar a una resolución al punto muerto que resultó de las elecciones generales del lunes pasado.

A la titular le acompañan los primeros ministros Roosevelt Skerrit de Dominica; Keith Mitchell de Granada; Ralph Gonsalves de San Vicente y las Granadinas; Keith Rowley de Trinidad y Tobago y el Secretario General de Caricom Embajador Irwin LaRocque.

Luego de las elecciones, la Misión de Observadores Electorales de Caricom en Granada emitirá una declaración preliminar y colaborará en la preparación de un informe final el que será presentado al embajador del organismo regional.

Por su parte, la presidenta del Tribunal Supremo de Guyana, Roxane George-Wiltshire, espera dar un informe después que falló a favor de que la corte tiene jurisdicción para escuchar una solicitud destinada a bloquear la declaración de los resultados de las elecciones generales y regionales de 2020.

Guyana vive una situación de creciente tensión después de que – tras nueve días – no se conozcan todavía los resultados de unos comicios en los que se juegan la victoria el opositor Partido Progresista del Pueblo (PPP) y la coalición Una Asociación para la Unidad Nacional + Alianza para el Cambio (APNU + AFC), que lidera el presidente Granger.

Las autoridades electorales esperaban dar los resultados finales de los comicios el fin de semana pasado, pero la decisión de la corte les impidió el anuncio, luego que los votos en el distrito electoral de la Región Cuatro deben ser recontados, de acuerdo con la oposición.

Telesur


CARICOM leaders due today to ease post-elections tensions

A delegation of Caribbean Community (CARICOM) heads led by Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley is due to arrive here today for a two-day visit intended to ease tensions in the country following last week’s disputed polls and to help broker a resolution to the political impasse.

Mottley is due to meet with the leadership of all parties that contested the polls during the visit, which was announced by her office and confirmed by both government and opposition.

Her office said the delegation will not only meet with politicians but with representatives of the Commonwealth, the Organization of American States, the European Union and the Carter Center observer missions that are in the country to monitor the conduct of the elections.

StaBroekNews


COURT TO DECIDE TODAY

THE electoral laws governing the tabulation of Statements of Poll for General and Regional Elections are directory and not mandatory, Senior Counsel Neil Boston argued on Tuesday, even as he maintained that the Returning Officer for Region 4, Clairmont Mingo, did not err when he declared the total number of votes for each Candidate in his District.

According to him, the Returning Officer resorted to a spreadsheet for the final count after there was ruckus and confusion in the Guyana Elections Commission’s (GECOM’s) Command Centre. However, on the flipside, Trinidad and Tobago’s Senior Counsel Douglas Mendes argued that Mingo failed to follow the correct procedure outlined in Section 84 of the Representation of the People Act. At 14:00hrs today, Chief Justice Roxane George-Wiltshire will decide whether the Returning Officer adhered to the Electoral Laws before issuing his declaration last Thursday

Oral arguments in the case – Reeaz Holladar vs the Returning Officer; the Chief Elections officer and GECOM – were heard on Tuesday in the High Court by the Chief Justice. In his submissions, Boston – the attorney representing the Returning Officer, the Chief Elections Officer and GECOM told the Court that the Representation of the People Act empowers a Returning Officer to choose his method of tabulating the Statements of Poll during an electoral process. “He can sit with persons, who are invited to be there, and he will go through the Statements of Poll or he can prepare a spreadsheet from the Statements of Poll and thereafter, he can declare the amount of votes received by the List of each Candidate,” the Senior Counsel submitted.

Senior Counsel Mendes – the lead attorney representing Holladar on behalf of the People’s Progressive Party/Civic – has argued that Section 84 of the Representation of the People Act stipulates that the tabulation be done in the presence of agents from the various political parties and observers, but Boston, in debunking that contention, submitted that Section 84 is directory and not mandatory. “The Returning Officer is duty-bound to rely on the Statements of Poll that were remitted to him from the various stations in District 4. He does not have to go through a period of resolving discrepancies that arise in relation to the Statements of Poll that he has received from the various stations,” he further submitted. Boston told the Court that despite PPP/C’s disruptive behaviour in the Command Centre on March 5, 2020, Mingo declared the total number of votes secured by each List of Candidates, having completed the final count.

Mingo recounts

In an Affidavit of Defence, Mingo disclosed that the process of tabulating the Statements of Poll for District Four commenced at around 22:30pm on Monday, March 2, 2020, under his supervision, in the presence of observers and candidates from the People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) and the A Partnership for National Unity + Alliance for Change (APNU+AFC). The Returning Officer noted that though he took ill at around 11:00hrs on March 4, and was rushed to the hospital, the process continued, in his absence, under the supervision of a Senior Clerk, Michelle Miller. The entire tabulation process, according to him, was completed at around 19:30hrs on March 4. “At that point, I was ready to make a Declaration in accordance with Section 84 of the Representation of the People Act, cap 1:03 but a request was made by the representatives of certain political parties for reconciliation between matters extracted from Statements of Poll in my possession and inputted into the spreadsheet and in about 3 or 4 of the Statements of Poll held by those representatives,” Mingo explained in his Affidavit in Defence. According to him, the request was accommodated and minor discrepancies were addressed. Mingo noted that while preparing to make the declaration on March 5, 2020, Miller was interrupted by a large contingent of PPP/C representatives, who were demanding “verification” of the entries made into the spreadsheet from the Statements of Poll in GECOM’s possession. Mingo said he found no merit in PPP/C’s request and proceeded to make the declaration of the total number of votes secured by each List of Candidates.

Breach of the Act

But Senior Counsel Mendes, in his oral submissions, argued that based on the affidavit submitted by Mingo, the final count of the Statements of Polls was not done by him but rather Miller, and as such there was further breach of the Representation of the People Act. But Boston rubbished the argument. “There is no evidence that he did not do the final count before the declaration of made,” Senior Counsel Boston said, while noting that Miller merely inputted the data onto the spreadsheet.

Asked by the Chief Justice to point to the evidence where Mingo tabulated the votes before his declaration, the Senior Counsel said while it is not expressly stated in Mingo’s Affidavit in Defence, the Court must accept the presumption of regularity. Maintaining that the final count was made by the Returning Officer, Senior Counsel Boston said the correct procedure was applied. He said it was not for the Returning Officer to be back and forth with the political parties on perceived discrepancies. “I don’t think that there can seriously be any complaint that there was not a substantial compliance,” he posited while alluding to Section 84 (2) of the Representation of the People Act. “There was compliance,” Senior Counsel Boston maintained.

Meanwhile, Mendes, in his submissions, argued that while Mingo reported that the process was completed on March 4, the Affidavits of the Deputy Chief Elections Officer, Roxanne Myers and Nicola Trotman stated that the tabulation of the Statements of Poll was suspended the very night. He said according to Myers, the use of spreadsheet was also suspended on March 4, and a decision was taken to use the Statements of Poll due to an objection.

He argued that while 421 of the Statements of Poll for District Four were verified during the initial stages of the tabulation process, 458 of the Statements of Poll remain unverified, as the data inputted by Miller and later declared by Mingo was not verified in the presence of representatives of the various political parties and observers. He said the actions of Miller and Mingo contravene the laws of Guyana as he pointed to Section 84 (1) of the Representation of the People Act. Section 84 (1) states: “As soon as practicable after the receipt of all the ballot boxes and the envelopes and packets delivered to him in pursuance of Section 83 (10), the Returning Officer shall, in the presence of such of the persons entitled under Section 86 (1) to be present as attend, ascertain the total votes cast in favour of the list in accordance with the Statements of Poll, and thereupon publicly declare the votes recorded for each list of Candidates.”

Transparency
Senior Counsel Mendes said due to the absence of party agents and observers, the transparency of the process comes into question. “The failure to require that the process be done strictly in accordance with Section 84 (1) will lead to distrust in the process, would lead to suspicion in the process, and would lead to a lack of confidence in the results that eventually declared,” the Trinidadian Senior Counsel submitted to the Court.
While Senior Counsel Mendes sought to suggest that the votes declared by Mingo vary from the carbon copies given to the PPP/C by the Presiding Officers, he was cautioned by the Chief Justice, who made it clear that she will not be treating with counts or data produced by any other person. Justice George-Wiltshire reminded him that the Court’s primary concern is whether the addition of the Statements of Poll was done in the presence of those entitled to be there.

Holladar, through the PPP/C is seeking to have the Statements of Poll recounted in the presence of agents from the various political parties and observers. If the orders sought by Holladar are not granted by the CJ, her ruling would effectively clear the way for GECOM to declare the final results for the General and Regional Elections. The Chairman of the Elections Commission, Justice (Ret’d) Claudette Singh would then write the Chancellor of the Judiciary, Yonette Cummings-Edwards for the President to be sworn-in.

Guyana Chronicle


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