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09/08/2018
INSIDE THE KITCHEN
ON THE PERFORMANCE OF THE ECP IN JULY 2018 ELECTIONS

 

On 14 August, Pakistan will celebrate its 71st birthday. It will be a day to haul up the national flag, and, as the septuagenarian Omar Khayyam once wrote, time also ‘to haul down the flag of hypocrisy’.  Before cutting the cake, though, it might help to peep inside the kitchen. 

All 105.96 million Pakistanis eligible to vote in the 2018 general elections expected that the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) would conduct them in an orderly, professional, and efficient manner. After all, hadn’t the ECP assured us after the 2008 elections (the ECP report released its report three years later, in July 2011) that, assisted by UNDP, it had commissioned a Computerised Electoral Rolls System (CERS) at a cost of Rs 249 m. from a Pakistani consortium M/S Kalsoft JV?

We should have taken notice at the time, when the CERS voters’ list showed 54 m. voters, and when within 15 days, another Supplemental List was generated outside the CERS which added 27 m. more voters. The final tally of registered voters peaked at 84 m. On election day, the turnout was 55%. From such miscounted acorns do electoral majorities grow.

Five years later, the ECP report on the May 2013 elections (released in June 2016), disclosed that the registered number of voters had increased to 86 m.  It held out that ‘the ECP had designed, developed and implemented the first ever comprehensive Result Management System (RMS) with the support of UNDP.’ Touted by ECP as a ‘significant achievement’, the RMS would cover results from 69,000 polling stations (i.e. ‘over 90%’). To ensure smooth operations, ECP–UNDP used 3,000 Master Trainers to educate ‘644,000 polling staff including 70,000 Presiding Officers.’  

The ECP convinced us that ‘arrangements were also made to upload preliminary results on the ECP’s website as soon as these were received in the Central Control Room set up in the ECP Secretariat at Islamabad. The ECP had finalized well in advance the methodology of collection, dissemination and announcement of preliminary (unofficial) election results.’

When the 2013 elections were announced, no one had any reason to suspect that the ECP was not ready and equipped to perform its statutory obligations. Should we have doubted the ECP’s intention ‘to have an efficient, swift and credible result communication system’? Or its seductive reassurance that it was all too aware that ‘one of core features of elections in Pakistan was that preliminary (unofficial) results are announced immediately after the completion of polling, followed by announcement of consolidated results by the ROs?’

In February 2018, the Election Commission of Pakistan announced that it had signed an agreement with NADRA to prepare a Result Transmission System (RTS). It never explained what happened to CERS or RMS. The new RTS was supposed ‘to enable presiding officers to transmit result to returning officers and Election Commission in real-time.’  We accepted that declaration at face value, just as we did Imran Khan’s disclosure that the COAS ‘stands by democracy.’

Would it be indiscreet now to question why the cost of conducting our general elections should have ballooned from Rs 1.85 bn. in 2008 to Rs 4.73 bn. in 2013?  Or why the estimated cost in 2018 is expected to be Rs 21 bn.?

Embedded in those figures are amounts paid to DROs/ROs under euphemistic headings. In 2008, the ‘Election Allowance/Diet’ was Rs 408 m. By 2013, it became an ‘Extra Duty Allowance/Diet Charges’ and fattened to Rs. 1.108 bn.  

Another figure that invites attention is the amount paid to the Armed Forces for their assistance. In 2008, the Army was paid Rs 120 m., and an additional Rs 4.6 m. for the airlifting of ballot papers to remote areas and for additional security.  In 2013, the ‘Allocation to Army for General Elections/Bye-Elections’ was Rs 758 m. and ‘Air Lifting of Ballot Papers using C130s and M17 helicopters’ cost Rs 78 m.  For the 2018 elections, the ECP has revealed that the Ministry of Finance paid the Armed Forces in advance Rs 9 billion, in large part because of the increased number of serving personnel plus reservists.

Perhaps, for cost conscious voters, the Election Commission in its report on the 2018 elections (don’t expect it earlier that 2021), might include the actual cost per Pakistani voter per constituency.

Despite this planning, effort and expenditure, the general elections of 2018 have left the nation in a sad quandary. The contesting parties are still squabbling over the veracity of the results. On 14 August, they will raise the same flag but on different flagpoles.

In July 1971, Dr Henry Kissinger, aware of the controversial 1970 elections, was asked by President Yahya Khan if he was a dictator.  Kissinger replied: “I don’t know, Mr President, except that for a dictator you run a lousy election.’

The 2018 election already has a similar reputation.

 

 

©  F.S. AIJAZUDDIN 

[DAWN, 8 AUG. 2018]   

 
09 August 2018
 
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