Founding President of IMANI Africa Franklin Cudjoe has raised issues against the spending plan of the Electoral Commission (EC) ahead of this year’s elections.
This comes on the back of reports that some biometric devices are missing.
On Tuesday, March 19, the Minority Leader of Parliament, Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson, indicated that the EC confirmed to them about the missing seven BVDs cannot be identified.
The minority leader has since called on the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service and other security agencies to “immediately issue a statement giving us the details of their investigations so far,” adding, “I am concerned and worried because that devices in the hands of an unknown person can compromise the future elections”.
But in a statement, Franklin Cudjoe said “Parliament and the Finance Ministry should be careful with EC’s Spending Plans in 2024.
“Ghana’s Electoral Commission is at its prancing and pranking best again. Having earned the dubious accolade of ‘ Voting mafioso’ for clandestinely disenfranchising my people in Santrokofi Akpafu, Likpe and Lolobi on the eve of the last election in 2020, l was warming up to their recent calmness in accomodating sensible views of political parties on issues such as the use of indelible ink and closing polls at 5pm instead of the jocular and amateurish contrary views they held.
“I knew something wasn’t quite right with the EC’s turnaround. It was just not in their DNA to be this graceful.
“And voila- the EC surreptitiously reported to a parliamentary inquiry that it had lost some biometric voter machines that were procured by rigging procurement process, leaving the country with a needless total bill of $150m in 2020- which the IMF has now accepted contributed to our economic atrophy.”
He added “Sadly, we never heard the EC report the missing biometric voter macines to the Police until an innocuous question at a parliamentary hearing revealed this fiction yesterday.
“Please, Parliament and the Finance Ministry, must ignore the EC. Claims of missing biometric voting machines is a decoy to declare the remaining machines compromised and set a procurement opportunity to waste money we don’t have on purchasing new machines.
“They did the same in 2020 by strangely discarding all biometric machines which Ghana had invested up to $60m in upgrading and successfully used to run the 2016 general elections and 2019 district elections with near zero error rates, to purchase new overpriced biometric machines through a heavily rigged procurement process.”
The post Franklin Cudjoe tells Parliament and Finance Ministry to be careful with EC’s spending plans in 2024 first appeared on 3News.
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