Opposition in Guyana granted injunctions to halt release of election results
GEORGETOWN, Guyana, CMC – Attorneys representing the main opposition People’s Progressive Party Civic (PPP/C) have been successful in obtaining a High Court injunction ordering the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) to verify the results of Region Four that the ruling coalition said shows that it won Monday’s regional and general elections.
Attorney Anil Nandlall told reporters that the opposition party had been able to secure three injunctions against GECOM from declaring the results of the general elections.
The move by the opposition followed the release of the results of Region Four by the Returning Officer, Clairmont Mingo, which showed that the coalition, A partnership for National Unity plus the Alliance for Change (APNU+ADC) had been able to overturn a hug deficit by winning country’s largest administrative region.
Nandlall, a former attorney general, told reporters that the first injunction prevents the Region Four Returning Officer from making any disclosure of the results in that division “until and unless he complies with the statutory procedures set out in Section 84 of the Representation of the People’s Act”.
Nandlall said that procedure is the verification process that was aborted and was never completed.
“That process is a condition precedent to any declaration. What you are declaring essentially is what was verified and reconciliated by all the parties examining their respective statements of the poll. That process was never completed so how can you have a declaration without your declaring what you have verified. But you never verified anything or you never completed the verification of anything. So an order was granted staying the declaration until that procedure is complied with.”
Nandlall, who is also an executive member of the PPP/C, said that the second injunction compels the Returning Officer to comply with Section 84 of the Representation of the People’s Act and “to conduct and complete that verification exercise and then make the declaration as the law requires it to be done,” while the third injunction restrains the Chief Elections Officer Keith Lowenfield and GECOM from making any declarations of the results of the general elections “unless and until the Returning Officer complies with the statutory code of verification enunciated in section 84.”
Nandlall told reporters that the statutory procedure sets out that after the Region Four Returning Officer makes his declaration, he has to submit that to Lowenfield, who then totals all the declarations from the returning officers of the country’s 10 administrative regions and then compiles in electronic and manual formats a detailed report of ballots cast per polling station.
He said such a comprehensive report is then presented to GECOM which has a duty to “examine the report to ensure accuracy and veracity and then based upon their conclusion make a declaration which would constitute the final declaration of the results.
“It is upon that final declaration only that a swearing in can take place. Any swearing in before that is illegal, ultra vires, null, void, unconstitutional, a complete and utter illegality. Because, what are you swearing in to? The election process is incomplete!”
Nandlall insisted that the electoral process is only completed when the results are verified, tabulated, and a declaration of them are made in accordance with the law.
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