Media reports out of Monrovia indicated that Ambassador
George Weah gave a statement following the election,
which laid out the theory of his claim of fraudulent
elections and outlined the thematic underpinnings
of his allegations that the outcome of the November
8th elections was bogus – that he was cheated
of victory. Analysis of Mr. Weah’s statement
lays bares the spuriousness and speciousness of his
contentions.
It was reported that Ambassador Weah stated unequivocally:
There is no doubt that the run-off election
was rigged.” Actually, there is strong evidence,
as presented in the reports submitted by several international
observers that the elections were free, fair, transparent,
and credible. Neither Mr. Weah nor his supporters
have presented any substantive evidence to counter
or contradict the findings of international observers.
The CDC’s Standard Bearer went on to say: “There
mere fact that we have in our possession more than
thirty ballots, pre-marked for the Unity Party, forcibly
taken from election officers at the polls on Election
Day, and exhibited to all Liberians through both the
print and electronic media are strong evidence that
the run-off election was rigged.” The “thirty
ballots” that Mr. Weah said he had in his possession
are what is called demonstrative evidence. Demonstrative
evidence is meant to clarify the facts. What specific
fact were the so-called 30 ballots meant to clarify?
A major defect of the charge is that Ambassador Weah
patently failed to identify at which polling place
these ballots were “forcibly taken from election
officers.” This was an essential evidentiary
requirement to lend validity to the claim. Identifying
the specific polling place would also enable investigators
to examine what occurred at that polling place.
Additionally, this allegation begs the question –
what action did CDC’s representative take at
the polling place where this alleged irregularity
occurred? Were there international observers present;
if so, was this situation brought to their attention?
It is noteworthy that in this statement Ambassador
Weah admitted that someone violated the elections
law by “forcibly” taking items away from
election officers.
Ambassador Weah stated further, “the discrepancies
on the tally sheets from polling places all over the
country show that the frauds pervaded the entire process.”
If there were discrepancies at tallying centers, why
did CDC representatives at the tallying center not
act then and there? Under the Polling Procedures issued
by the National Elections Commission (NEC), it is
stated that representatives of parties and observers
have an important role to help ensure that
the election is free, fair and transparent.”
The various Election Procedures issued by the NEC
outline openly what roles party representatives had
in the process.
The Procedures further provide that party representatives
may witness all processes in the polling places
except the act of a vote recording his/her vote.”
Importantly, the Procedure entitled party representatives
to bring to the attention of the Presiding
Officers their concerns regarding procedures followed
in the polling place and any suspected irregularities.”
Ambassador Weah failed to explain what actions his
party representatives took in respect to any irregularities
that occurred at the unnamed polling place from which
the 30 ballots were forcibly taken. Unless the only
action was to “forcibly” take the “pre-printed
ballots.”
Ambassador Weah referenced a number of precincts,
citing the registered voters, the number of polling
places, tally sheets and the number of ballots received
by those precincts. He concludes: “What these
two tally sheets reveal is that the National Elections
Commission issued to the election officers ballots
far in excess of what were required for voting at
each Voting Precinct. The ostensible reason is that
the excess ballots would be marked for the Unity Party
and stuffed in the ballot boxes.” Even if the
facts are precisely as Mr. Weah contends and even
if seen in the light most favorable and supportive
of his claim, no rule of evidence would accept that
what he presented supports the conclusion he arrived
at. It is too a huge leap.
NEC’s Procedures provide that at polling places,
the Presiding Officer shall inspect ballot boxes to
ensure they are empty and ask “electoral observers
and representatives to confirm that it is empty.”
This means that at each polling place, international
and domestic observers as well as representatives
of Mr. Weah’s party and Mrs. Johnson Sirleaf’s
party confirmed before voting began that ballot boxes
were empty. The boxes would then be sealed on all
sides and the sealing documented, including by parties’
representatives.
Ambassador Weah emphasized during his statement that
ballots from different polling places were issued
to “another Polling Place.” Under the
Procedure, this was permissible: NEC’s Procedures
state: “If a polling place within a voting precinct
runs out of ballots, the Presiding Officer will request
extra ballots from a neighbouring polling place’s
stock. These extra ballot papers must be recorded
by the Presiding Officer on the Presiding Officer’s
Worksheet (form PO1).” It was therefore perfectly
legal for polling places to send ballots to “another
Polling Place.” The required documentation of
such transfers is the Presiding Officer’s Worksheet,
not the “tally sheet” which the ambassador
waved about. It is important to note that party representatives
and observers are permitted to sign the work sheet
as witnesses, and presumably Ambassador Weah’s
representatives signed Presiding Officer’s worksheets
where they were, including those documenting ballot
transfers.
Under the Procedure, when voting ends, the Presiding
Officer is required to seal the ballot boxes and write
the seal number on the worksheet. Party representatives
and electoral observers were permitted to write the
seal numbers also. The Counting Procedure of NEC states:
The counting process should be organized in
such a way that observers and representatives can
clearly see all stages.” The Counting Procedure
states that it is important that “party representatives
and observers witness the opening of ballot boxes
as this stage of the process is vital for the procedural
integrity of the process as a whole.” Ambassador
Weah’s representatives were there when ballot
boxes were shown to be empty, were there as people
voted and were there went the ballots were counted.
He needs to explain how ballot boxes were being stuffed
in the presence of his representatives.
In concluding, Ambassador Weah proclaimed: “The
obvious evidence of this massive fraud is the low
voter turn-out at every polling center; and yet the
NEC's preliminary results reveal a percentage turnout
of voters comparable to the October 11 elections.”
It is very unclear what the import of this statement
is, but it clearly has no significance and is actually
meaningless. It is one of those statements that sound
like one is making a point when they have actually
not said anything. Nonetheless this point needs to
be addressed.
NEC’s statistics show that 1,352,730 Liberians
were registered to vote. In October, 1,012,673 or
74.8% of registered voters cast ballots in the elections.
Of all those who voted, 973,790 ballots were determined
to be valid. In reality therefore, 71.9% of total
registered voters decided the October elections. In
contrast, during the November run-off, 825,716 or
61% of registered voters cast ballots. Of all those
who voted, 805,572 ballots were determined to be valid.
In reality therefore, 59.5% of total registered voters
decided the November elections. These statistics show
that 168,218 or 16.6% of registered voters who had
voted in October did not vote in November. The rate
of voter turnout in November was 19.5 percent less
than in October. By any measure, that is a significant
difference, and voter turnout for the two elections
cannot reasonably or rationally be considered “comparable.”
Finally, the complaint procedure regarding “incidents
that are alleged to have occurred during the voting
or counting must also be entered into the log book
of the relevant polling station and be submitted in
writing to the relevant county electoral magistrate”
within 24 hours of the occurrence of the event. It
is no wonder that there are no reports that the allegations
which were dramatically presented by Ambassador Weah
in his statement were entered into the log books of
the polling stations where they supposedly occurred
or submitted to county electoral magistrates within
24 hours. One can reasonably surmise that perhaps
they were not documented in polling stations’
log books or presented to electoral magistrates because
they did not happen.
Ambassador Weah did not offer a credible case in support
of his contention of fraud in his recent statement.