The National Democratic Congress (NDC) has kicked against any plans by the Electoral Commission (EC) to pilot the implementation of the Representation of People Amendment Act (ROPAA) in the 2020 elections.
The Party believed that if the ROPAA should be implemented, it should be conducted in all the 193 countries recognised by the United Nations, instead of conducting the election in only 64 nations where Ghana had established embassies.
The Party believed that if the ROPAA should be implemented, it should be conducted in all the 193 countries recognised by the United Nations, instead of conducting the election in only 64 nations where Ghana had established embassies.
The Party called for stakeholders’ consultation by involving the political parties, civil society organizations and election management body to fully participate in drawing up a workable program or roadmap towards the operationalisation of ROPAA to ensure holistic approach and consensus.
Mr Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, the Member of Parliament for North Tonga and Ranking Member of Foreign Affairs in Parliament, stated the Party’s position on the matter at a roundtable discussion on the way forward of the implementation of the Representation of People Amendment Act, 2006, (Act 699), in Accra, on Wednesday.
The ROPAA is a legislation Parliament passed in 2006, which entitles Ghanaians living in the Diaspora to vote during national elections.
Mr Ablakwa raised concerns regarding funding of elections in the Diaspora and explained that about 60 per cent of the country’s election cost was financed by the donor agencies and international partners.
Additionally, he kicked against the suggestion that Ghanaian Ambassadors in missions abroad would serve as Returning Officers for the EC, arguing that those ambassadors were political appointees with some already showing their political partiality and, thus, could not trust the genuineness of the election outcome.
The Party also disagreed with the proposal that Ghana’s embassies abroad should lead the registration of eligible Ghanaians in the Diaspora to vote, which was against Article 45 of the 1992 Constitution.
Mr Ablakwa averred that there was a lot of mistrust within the political elements and cited the brouhaha surrounding the political vigilantism and asked a rhetoric question; “If the NDC was in power, would the NPP allow it to implement the ROPAA?”
“In my honest view, I think Ghana is not ready for ROPAA implementation in the 2020 election, but I support the principle, and I’m in solidarity with Ghanaians in the Diaspora and everywhere…”.
“I want a peaceful election determined by Ghanaians in Ghana and the limited ones who have been voting from the Diaspora - student on scholarship, those working in the United Nations institutions and workers in Ghana’s Embassies.”
He asked the election management body, the EC, to exercise caution and not rush in operationalising the ROPAA because election has the potential of plunging the country into anarchy and making the peace and harmony.
Mr Ablakwa said stakeholders must dispassionately discuss the matter without looking through the lenses of the NDC and the NPP.
He said the country should not ignore the real challenges in the ROPAA implementation and consolidation of all the laws on elections, especially those that bordered on the Diaspora Voting.
He underlined the need for the nation to set its priorities right and adopt a scientific approach towards the operationalisation of ROPAA.
This could be enhanced by looking at the cost evaluation and how much would be required to fully implement the law.
The stakeholders meeting was organized by the Centre for Democracy (CSD-Ghana), in collaboration with the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, to stimulate discussion towards the operationalisation of the ROPAA. Source: ghananewsagency. org
Mr Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, the Member of Parliament for North Tonga and Ranking Member of Foreign Affairs in Parliament, stated the Party’s position on the matter at a roundtable discussion on the way forward of the implementation of the Representation of People Amendment Act, 2006, (Act 699), in Accra, on Wednesday.
The ROPAA is a legislation Parliament passed in 2006, which entitles Ghanaians living in the Diaspora to vote during national elections.
Mr Ablakwa raised concerns regarding funding of elections in the Diaspora and explained that about 60 per cent of the country’s election cost was financed by the donor agencies and international partners.
Additionally, he kicked against the suggestion that Ghanaian Ambassadors in missions abroad would serve as Returning Officers for the EC, arguing that those ambassadors were political appointees with some already showing their political partiality and, thus, could not trust the genuineness of the election outcome.
The Party also disagreed with the proposal that Ghana’s embassies abroad should lead the registration of eligible Ghanaians in the Diaspora to vote, which was against Article 45 of the 1992 Constitution.
Mr Ablakwa averred that there was a lot of mistrust within the political elements and cited the brouhaha surrounding the political vigilantism and asked a rhetoric question; “If the NDC was in power, would the NPP allow it to implement the ROPAA?”
“In my honest view, I think Ghana is not ready for ROPAA implementation in the 2020 election, but I support the principle, and I’m in solidarity with Ghanaians in the Diaspora and everywhere…”.
“I want a peaceful election determined by Ghanaians in Ghana and the limited ones who have been voting from the Diaspora - student on scholarship, those working in the United Nations institutions and workers in Ghana’s Embassies.”
He asked the election management body, the EC, to exercise caution and not rush in operationalising the ROPAA because election has the potential of plunging the country into anarchy and making the peace and harmony.
Mr Ablakwa said stakeholders must dispassionately discuss the matter without looking through the lenses of the NDC and the NPP.
He said the country should not ignore the real challenges in the ROPAA implementation and consolidation of all the laws on elections, especially those that bordered on the Diaspora Voting.
He underlined the need for the nation to set its priorities right and adopt a scientific approach towards the operationalisation of ROPAA.
This could be enhanced by looking at the cost evaluation and how much would be required to fully implement the law.
The stakeholders meeting was organized by the Centre for Democracy (CSD-Ghana), in collaboration with the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, to stimulate discussion towards the operationalisation of the ROPAA. Source: ghananewsagency. org