The NPP government?s attempt to amend PNDC LAW 284 to make room for Diasporians like me - after we have practically fled from the inequalities, inadequacies and humiliation embedded in our system - to register and vote, has torched off a political and legal storm. In the process, some sane constitutional principles and eminent citizens of our society are being unfairly attacked in a most disrespectful manner by individuals who want their parochial and selfish agenda to trump over reality and commonsense - which, of course, form part of any well- intentioned interpretation of constitutional provisions.
It is particularly striking that these individuals are so confused and conflicted that they continue to hedge the issues we are confronted with: The harder they desperately try to refine their ?absolute right to vote theory?, the more they display their lack of understanding of the constitutional principles involved in the issue.
The narrow, but remarkable issue here is whether the government is acting unconstitutionally by not providing the necessary facilities to enable majority of Ghanaians living abroad to register and vote in elections and referenda in our dear country. In other words, is the government trampling on Diasporians? right to register and vote by not putting in place registration centers and voting polls in the foreign lands we have voluntarily chosen to reside? Put another way, is the government acting contrary to the dictates of the constitution via Article 42?
Before our opponents start fawning all over each other, let?s stress here that the choices we make in life pointedly influence how we realize and enjoy our rights as citizens of the country we all love to call Ghana. It therefore stands to perfect constitutional wisdom to offer here that the government is not under any affirmative or compellable constitutional duty to supplement or for a better use of language subsidize diasporians? right to register and vote for the simple reason that diasporians themselves burdened that precious right. The self-evident truth is that, diasporians burdened the realization and enjoyment of that right when they voluntarily left the shores of our dear country in search of greener pastures abroad instead of staying home and coping with life?s difficult demands. By so doing, they conveniently and constitutionally took themselves out of the scope of Article 42 notwithstanding the fact that some of them are Ghanaians eighteen years and above and of sound mind. This easily explains why the government rightly and legitimately distinguished disaporians from other Ghanaians manning our diplomatic missions abroad, students on government scholarships, military personnel on peace keeping duties outside, etc.; As the NDC rightly pointed out ?this particular category of people were sent out to their countries of posting on special missions on behalf of the state?. The government will therefore be acting unconstitutionally if it fails to provide the necessary facilities to enable this group of Ghanaians to fully enjoy their right to register and vote.
On the other hand of the constitutional equation, if the government decides to provide us with the means to actualize our right to vote outside Ghana, it will just be extending its financial and political largesse and not because the constitution compels it to do so! This situation further explains why it is imperative for the government to seek the political and economic backing of parliament to put in place such a herculean task of providing Diasporians with the means to exercise their right to vote.
>From the foregoing, isn?t it easy for any right thinking Ghanaian to discern that PNDC LAW 284 is in consonance with the true meaning of Article 42? It is easy to dismiss the emotional outbursts of our opponents as mere ranting of disgruntled Ghanaians who want the government to undo their self-inflicted constitutional disability. Isn?t it insulting for this same group of Ghanaians to turn around and accuse the government of an unconstitutional act when they themselves left the country in search of ?elusive? fortunes abroad? What they refuse to recognize is that Article 42 like the rest of the provisions in the constitution is couched in general or broad terms and language. Therefore, to give practical meaning to such language, the legislature - at that time, the Provisional National Defence Council and not the Electoral Commission as they want us to believe - was compelled to enact PNDC LAW 284 to regulate elections in the country. Individuals like Kwaku Azar should get use to the stark fact that LAWS like PNDC Law 284 were enacted to make our constitution work and work efficiently. Without Law 284 how were we going to conduct elections?
Now:
1. Do we seriously think we will be enhancing our democracy if we allow diasporians to register and vote when we don?t even have any data whatsoever of the number of Ghanaians living abroad?
2. Again, let me borrow a page from the NDC when they poignantly offered ?if Ghanaians are to be registered without reference to the residence qualification, how are they to be identified with constituencies, especially in relation to the counting of their parliamentary votes??
OR
3. Is this going to be one of those classic cases where diasporians are going to abstain from voting for any parliamentary candidate?
4. And, by the way, do we have the financial, technological and human means to execute this electoral task?
5. And, to extricate themselves from 4 above, haven?t they offered a 25-dollar tax on disaporians who want to register and vote? Have they really considered the constitutional fallout of this patently flawed proposal? When did they start conditioning the right to vote on wealth or our ability to pay? Is wealth or our ability to pay now a qualification for one to register and vote? These people have stopped been funny!
5. Don?t we honestly think that the whole exercise will be fraught with massive ?corruption and maladministration? as Prof. K. B. Asante rightly pointed out?
6. Isn?t it a notorious fact that there are foreigners walking around with Ghanaian passports?
7. Aren?t these some of the pitfalls and mischiefs PNDC LAW 284 sought to overcome when it properly excluded diasporians from registering and voting?
Ladies and gentlemen, what further compelling reasons do our opponents need to establish the impregnable fact that the government should not provide diasporians the facilities to enable them exercise their right to register and vote until we find the right mix of solutions for the problems outlined above! Why does this government want to sacrifice the sanctity of the electoral process just to score some very cheap political point?
Meanwhile, with all their emotional outbursts and loud talk, what is stopping our opponents from testing the constitutionality or otherwise of PNDC LAW 284? Are they that scared of the certain legal whipping they are going to receive from the Supreme Court? Or, is this a case where they can?t even trust our Supreme Court? In fact, these individuals have legal mouth paaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!
We shall be back.
Thank you.