Last Updated on Tuesday, 13 September 2022, 18:18 by Denis Chabrol
Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs, Anil Nandlall on Tuesday said the current constitutional provisions and laws governing elections could be changed if the constitutional reform commission accepts such proposals.
“Nothing is cast in stone. Everything can change but we must understand the process and we must understand what the law says on each of these matters,” he told Demerara Waves Online News.
Mr Nandlall said when the constitutional reform bill is approved and the commission, made up of 50 percent each of parliamentary politicians and civil society, the opposition would be free to table proposals. “They will have their say at the appropriate time,” he told Demerara Waves Online News.
Against the backdrop of a commitment by Opposition Leader Aubrey Norton to support constitutional and legal amendments to provide for the removal of the names of deceased persons and emigrants from the voters list and the use of biometrics, the Attorney General was asked whether that could be done before the constitutional reform process. He said, “we are committed to the constitutional reform process.”
“We are going to strengthen the law by the electoral statutory reforms that are coming. We have a constitutional reform process that will come shortly and that also…We have said it is a publicly-driven process. Once the public consultation produces suggestions and recommendations to alter any part of the constitution, that will be addressed by the constitutional reform commission,” he said.
Giving a glimpse into the proposed amendment to the relevant election laws, he said it would now be mandatory for the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) to remove the names of dead persons. “Apparently, it is not clear. It is not being done but we are now making it an obligation and I believe it will carry a criminal offence if there is a breach of that obligation,” he said.
Speaking with reporters outside the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) where a handful of persons were staging a protest to press demands for a clean voters list, Executive Member of the Working People’s Alliance (WPA) Tacuma Ogunseye said there was need to scrap the “corrupt” voters list because, bloated with almost 700,000 names of adults, it could not produce credible elections. “I support any constitutional reform that is targeted to the electoral system to make it more accountable and make it more credible and in terms of biometrics and a new voters list, surely I would support and the WPA will support any change in the electoral law to make that possible,” he said. He restated that constitutional reform should bring an end to winner-takes-all politics and provide for power-sharing after elections.
One of the estimated 20 persons on the picket line condemned President Irfaan Ali’s behaviour at a community meeting at Mocha-Arcadia, but said he was disappointed at the turnout of the protest.
Attorney General Nandlall reminded that the constitution and the law prohibit the removal of persons names from the list on the grounds of residency.