POLITICS
Group threatens to stop 2020 elections over non-implementation of ROPAA
The Chairman of the Progressive Alliance Movement, Dr Kofi Boateng has threatened to place an injunction on the upcoming December polls over the failure of the Electoral Commission to implement the Representation of People’s Amendment Act (ROPAA).
Speaking on Starr Today on Thursday, Dr Boateng lamented that Ghanaians citizens in the diaspora have been disenfranchised for a very long time over the failure of the EC to implement ROPAA.
“We have been disenfranchised not since 2006 but since the constitution came into being in 1992,” Dr Boateng said adding “the elections will happen on December 7, 2020, so one option available to us is to put an injunction on it because you can’t disenfranchise a group who have been given the franchise by the constitution.”
His comments come after the EC stated that it cannot implement the ROPAA for this year’s elections.
According to the EC, Parliament was yet to act on the Constitutional Instrument (CI) that will spell out the modalities and guidelines to implement ROPAA which the EC submitted in June this year.
The Deputy Commissioner of the EC in charge of Corporate Services, Dr Bossman Eric Asare, explained to the Daily Graphic in an interview that the CI would provide the framework and modalities on how Ghanaians abroad could register as voters and also vote.
He said the EC had done its part by submitting the CI to Parliament and that the onus was on the legislative body to act.
Article 42 of the 1992 Constitution states: “Every citizen of Ghana of 18 years of age or above and of sound mind has the right to vote and be registered as a voter for the purposes of public elections and referenda.”
However, the Representation of the People Law, 1992 (PNDCL 284), the law that operationalised the constitutional provision as stipulated in Article 42, did not allow Ghanaians living abroad to register and also vote from their locations, even though Article 42 does not state that only Ghanaians in Ghana could enjoy that right.
Parliament, in 2006, therefore, passed ROPAA (Act 699) as an amendment to PNDCL 284 to cure that defect.
However, its implementation was not carried through by the EC.
-Starr FM