Managing
Editor of the Daily Searchlight, Ken Kuranchie has called on the
Chairman of the Electoral Commission (EC), Dr. Kwadwo Afari Gyan, to
resign from his post for failing to uphold the credibility of the
Commission.
Making inference from the revelations by Dr. Afari
Gyan during the election petition, Ken Kuranchie was of a strong view
that the EC Chair had undermined the electoral system in the nation.
Speaking
on Oman FM, he called for major changes in the Electoral Commission,
averring that “in any Western country, any proper democracy; Afari Gyan
would have resigned before this came to an end…”
He together with
the Director of Research Monitoring and Evaluation of the electoral
commission, “Amadu Sulley and the people who were in charge of the last
elections should clean up and get out of there so that we see that
somebody with a little bit of integrity is fit into the place so that we
can go forward…We are fed up with people like Amadu Sulley and Afari
Gyan; people who will undermine themselves for their own personal
interests and put all of us at risk,” Ken Kuranchie stressed.
He
also questioned the basis for the President of the nine Supreme Court
Justices, Justice William Atuguba, to propose that there should be
reforms in the electoral system in order to avert any possible breaches
of the laws governing elections in the country.
To him, it doesn’t lie in the bosom of the Judges to make such appeal.
“Why
should Justice Atuguba or any of the nine Lordships spend their time
thinking about reforms for Ghana’s election?” he queried and
sarcastically expressed that in reference to the court ruling the nation
“held elections without any problem occurring. There was no double
registration. There was no problem with the register…Everything was
correct on the pink sheets. We’ve voted and John Mahama has won, so why
suggest reforms for us?”
Suggesting a way forward to improve the
electoral system, Ken Kuranchie said the Commission should make
available an electoral calendar comprising the time schedules for
registration and end of registration together with other vital
information, which should spell out the guiding principles of elections. |
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