Tuesday 24 April 2012

Sit-in protest in Kuching on April 28, PKR Wanita says the EC has failed


Kuching, April 24, 2012: Besides Dataran Merdeka in Kuala Lumpur, sit-in rally organised by a Coalition of Non-Govermental Organisations (Bersih 3.0) is going to be held at the Kuching Waterfront and the Old Court House carpark this Saturday.

It is scheduled to start at 2pm on April 28, 2012.

PKR Wanita vice head Voon Shiak Ni told reporters today that a lot of people are unaware that the sit-in protest to demand for electoral reforms is going to be held in Kuching.

"When we distributed the yellow pamphlets, they (people) asked us about the sit-in protest at Dataran Mederka," she said.

Voon urged more people to come to the protest at the Waterfront and the Old Court House compound.

"We expect 1,000 to turn up at the sit-in protest," she said.

She said the democratic-minded people who want fair and clean election have every right to voice their concern at the electoral rolls.

She said it is a sham efforts to set up the Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) to get the feedback from the people on electoral reforms when the electoral rolls are tainted with dubious and suspicious voters.

Voon said out of the 22 proposals submitted by PSC for approval by Parliament last week, the Election Commission has failed to live up to its promise.

"The EC recommended five out of the 22 proposals to be implemented for the upcoming general election.

"The five are: (a) tempat mengundi changed to pusat mengundi, (b) membuang undi changed to mengundi, (c) political parties barred from setting up canopies near the polling centres, (d) the schedules of the polling agents and counting agents to be decided by presiding officers of the polling centres, and that the political parties need to submit the names of the polling agents and counting agents, and (e) agents of political parties are not allowed to sit or be near to the commission desk at the polling centres," Voon said.

As to the barring of political parties from setting up canopies near the polling centres and stations, Voon said the Opposition objected strongly to this ruling.

"After some argument, the commission relented but the canopies must be 100 metres away from the polling centres," she said.

Voon said the five proposals to be implemented by the commission for the upcoming elections have nothing to do with electoral reforms or clean electoral rolls.

"We are very disappointed with the commission and it is very clear that the whole exercise about pushing for electoral reforms by the commission or the BN government had deviated from the demands made by Bersih 2.0 in 2011," she said.

Voon said nothing was done to clean the electoral rolls and in fact, she observed that more had been done to add to the numbers of dubious voters and postal votes.

"For example, there are more than 240,000 postal voters created by the commission classified as the so-called volunteers of SPR.

"These numbers far exceeded the numbers of the existng postal voters from the army, and that the commission is very firm about having these 240,000 volunteers," she said.

"From the staitistics obtained from the past elections, up to 90 per cent of the ballots cast through the postal voting system were grossly in favour of the BN," she said.

Voon said that the Opposition also questioned the presence of about 400,000 dubious voters in the electoral rolls.

"These 400,000 voters, in our belief, are enough to swing 35 federal seats in favour of the Barisan Nasional," she pointed out.

Voon said the irony was that over one million Malaysians residing overseas are denied their democratic and constitutional rights to vote by the commission.

"PKR Women Wing, therefore, calls on all registered voters to come out in full force to cast their votes in the upcoming election," she said.

She said the Opposition needed al the votes if there is going to be a change in the government. By Sematong Express.