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| Dr. Douglas during his
first press conference of 2010 |
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The three member NGO
coalition has released an official Election Day Observer
report which lists among other electoral infractions,
misconduct on the part of the Prime Minister. The
report, which was released on Monday, was compiled
by the Coalition's members, the Evangelic Association,
the Christian Council and the Chamber of Industry
and Commerce.
According to the document,
St. Kitts Nevis Labour Party leader Hon. Dr. Denzil
Douglas caused disruption in Constituency 4 (Halfway
Tree) during the voting process on January 25th.
"The candidate
appeared to have been fully participating in some
of the altercations surrounding the presence of St.
Pauls residents in election lines for constituency
4. Eye witness testimony affirm that the candidate
was adamant that such St. Pauls residents who are
actually residents in his home Constituency 6 should
be allowed to vote regardless of the fact that they
did not reside anywhere in Constituency 4. This disruptive
presence by Dr. Denzil Douglas was responsible in
large measure for the prolonged interruption of traffic
flow in and out of Halfway Tree," it read.
It went on to say
that, "Voters felt that instances such as this
should not be allowed to happen and set a bad example
for our people when the head of government is facilitating
and advocating voter irregularities of this nature."
The report claimed
that NGO Observers witnessed a conversation between
Dr. Denzil Douglas and the military in which he berated
them for their failure to collect voters from Constituency
6 in order for them to vote in Constituency 4 and
5.
"The NGO Coalition
is firmly of the view that no politician - even if
he is Prime Minister - should conduct himself in such
a manner."
Dr. Douglas went on
the offensive during his first press conference of
2010, held on Wednesday, denying parts of the NGO
Coalition Election Observer report. He especially
denounced the report's claim vis-à-vis a conversation
between himself and any member of the Defense Force.
"I want to make
a very clear statement here this afternoon that the
section of the report you [reporter] quoted from is
not only false, it is malicious and deliberately so
I believe, because if someone reported that the Prime
Minister appeared to be disruptive what is so difficult
for a member of the Coalition team to come and meet
with me and say 'Mr. Prime Minister this matter was
reported by one of the NGO observers, could you give
us any response as to why you were in Halfway Tree
if you were seen speaking to a military officer- and
that did not happen- why were you speaking to a military
officer?'
"To simply take
someone's reporting which is false and a lie and put
it into a document that appears to be a final document
as a report of their assessment of the election as
monitors is terribly, terribly bad."
Dr. Douglas reiterated
his assertion of members of the NGO coalition being
motivated by their individual or collective political
agendas.
"I want to say
that the section you quoted from is false; it is malicious;
and in my opinion it has been deliberately put as
part of the political agenda of members of the coalition
who seem to have a political agenda that they are
pursuing for the PAM party that has lost the elections
on January 25th," Dr. Douglas said.
The NGO report also
spoke to "blatant violations of electoral regulations"
including voters being allowed to take large handbags
and cellphones into the voting booth. Voters are restricted
by the electoral laws from taking these items into
the polling stations. This alleged infraction, the
report contends, suggests the "election officials
were not as vigilant as they should have been".
NGO coalition observers
were present at all polling divisions for the duration
of the poll. In its recommendations of changes to
the electoral procedures, the NGO coalition suggested
"a serious review of the need for the presence
of Defense Force personnel in riot gear toting M16
rifles" at polling divisions.
It also alleged impropriety
on the part of the Defense Force saying, "It
was clearly observed by NGO Observers in Constituency
4 that military vehicles of the Defense Force were
being used to transport voters from St. Pauls to polling
stations in Constituency 4 and 5. This is an abuse
of state assets and is certainly biased, given the
fact that these voters appeared to be supporters of
the ruling SKNLP. Such practice should be condemned
and discontinued."
Recommendations were
made to amend electoral laws to allow for persons
registering to vote to provide proof of residency
other than word of mouth in the hope that it would
"eliminate voter irregularity as it related to
voting in appropriate constituencies".
The NGO observer report's
overall conclusion that the election was conducted
"in a free and fair manner in most instances"
conflicted with its claim that, "Should the current
system be allowed to continue it would make a mockery
out of the presence of outside observer teams who
may fooled into thinking that the elections are free
and fair when they are really arriving in the federation
well after the voter fraud has been committed by the
issue of voter id cards."
Dr. Douglas belittled
the coalition for not communicating with him before
drafting a final report for dissemination as observer
missions from the Commonwealth, Caricom and the OAS
had done.
"Observer teams
from Caricom, OAS and Commonwealth observed the elections
and met with me and discussed their preliminary reports
and asked questions for clarification. I do not even
know if they [NGO coalition] had the common courtesy
to send a copy of their report - and it appears not
even to be a preliminary report but a final report
- to me the Prime Minister."
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