General News of Monday, 29 April 2024

Source: classfmonline.com

Who bought BVDs 'hard-coded' for electoral purposes? – IMANI shreds EC's explanation

A biometric verification device | File photo A biometric verification device | File photo

IMANI Africa has raised concerns regarding the Ghana Electoral Commission's explanation regarding the discovery of 10 obsolete biometric verification devices (BVDs) at a recycling plant.

In response to the EC's statement clarifying that the BVDs were obsolete and legally auctioned, IMANI Africa has demanded further information on the auction process.

They seek clarification on the auctioneers' licensing, the method of auction, and the identity of successful bidders.

Additionally, IMANI Africa questions the rationale behind purchasing obsolete devices specifically designed for electoral purposes and the involvement of a commercial recycling plant in handling potentially sensitive data.

The think tank stresses the importance of transparency in the disposal of these BVDs to uphold public trust in the electoral process.

Key inquiries from IMANI Africa include the identities of auctioneers and successful bidders, the auction's advertising and the authorisation for recycling these devices in a facility lacking secure data handling capabilities.

"The EC claims that the 10 BVDs were auctioned and that they just somehow then found their way into a recycling plant. Who were the auctioneers? Are they registered auctioneers licensed to conduct auctions by the Auctioneers Registration Board?"

"Who were the successful bidders? How was the auction advertised? Why would anyone want to buy ten used biometric devices that the EC claims have been "hard-coded" for electoral purposes, for which reason it has refused to use the thousands of devices bought in recent years?"

"Why would a commercial recycling plant be interested in just ten devices? Who authorised the recycling of the devices in a facility without adequate secure data handling capabilities?" IMANI asked.

IMANI also lunged at the EC, saying its press statement was "full of lies, half-truths, and pure fantasies.

"The EC says that only ten biometric verification devices (BVDs) were 'auctioned'. And that they 'found their way' into a recycling plant. The obvious questions that the media ought to ask are: a) Before the EC jettisoned the existing system, it had told Parliament that it had implemented a '2 BVDs per polling station' policy and, therefore, had more than 70,000 BVDs in stock.

"Then, in 2020, it proceeded to buy a brand-new set of biometric voter registration (BVR) kits with corresponding BVD kits and swore (despite video evidence collected by Bright Simons) that they never used any of the pre-existing devices in the 2020 mass voter registration exercise. Why, then, did they auction only 10 out of the over 70,000 devices? Why '10', and not 5, 100, or 1000?" IMANI wondered.

"How have the remaining tens of thousands of devices been disposed of? Ghanaians who have been paying attention to the EC's strange conduct under the current leadership know that the EC admitted to having lost some BVRs recently, but when pushed it insisted that they were only five in number. There is a clear pattern here. What exactly is going on?" the think tank asked.