HomeBongBong County: Civil Society Actors Call For Change In Election Date

Bong County: Civil Society Actors Call For Change In Election Date

Bong County – The Civil Society Chairperson of Bong County Madam Marline Jarboe says “it will be good to move the date of the elections from October to December” to allow adequate campaigning and civic and voter educations.

“This will help limit hindrances created by the rainy season and bad road networks,” Ms. Jarboe told LocalVoicesLiberia in Gbarnga city.

The current Liberia elections’ date is the second Tuesday in October of each election year, according to article 83 ‘a’ of the Constitution.

Marline Jarboe, Civil Society Council of Liberia Bong county chairperson, says changing the election date will ensure “adequate” civic voter’s education

However, some locals, many of whom are farmers, say they abstained from the 2017 elections due to the condition of the bad road in major communities across the Bong County.

Other said they were unable to cast their ballots due to heavy down pull of rain that also resulted in the bad condition of the road.

“We left from here that morning and we chartered car to carry us but unfortunately, we were stuck in the center of the road for more than seven hours,” recalls Moses Kerkulah, a resident of Kpoyalah.

“At least when the date of the election is changed, from the rainy season to dry season, many of us who are living in rural parts of Liberia will be able to form part of the decision-making processes of in our country.”

Kerkulah added that it would be an added advantage for people in rural Liberia to exercise their voting right if the government through its Legislative branch would ensure a change in the election’s date.

For Tiangeh Taylor, Executive Director of Impact Girls Liberia – a local NGO, he wants a framework to be put in place to prevent sitting elected lawmakers from contesting for another elected position without first resigning his or her current post.

She said the current system allows a waste of public funds because of the prevalence of by-elections caused by already elected public officials being elected to another post.

Tiangeh Taylor is Executive director of Impact Girls Liberia. She says there should a new law banning sitting lawmakers from contesting by-elections to avoid waste of public resources through the conduct of frequent by-elections

“When they change the date, it will help NEC because poll workers will not be disturbed by rain, they will do their jobs better,” added a community youth leader, Amos Mulbah.

According to Mulbah, “if we uphold the contemporary date of the elections, there will always be low turnout due to the rain and bad roads”.

Benedict Roberts, Director of CARITAS Gbarnga, says he “strongly supports the citizens who are requesting a change of the election’s date”, adding that “such change will also help the country”.

At the same time, the Upper Bong NEC’s Magistrate has admitted to challenges poll worker usually go through during elections.

According to Magistrate Daniel Newland, the recommendations by locals in the county were not far from what has been proposed by local and international organizations who observed the 2017 general and presidential elections.

Benedict Roberts, Director of CARITAS in Gbarnga, Bong County, “strongly” supports citizens call for the change in the election date

It can be recalled that after the first and second rounds of the 2017 elections, which were generally certified as calm and orderly by NEC and international observer missions, the Elections Coordinating Committee and other International observers put forth recommendations for electoral reforms.

Report By: Emmanuel Mafelah In Bong County

Senkpeni
Senkpenihttps://localvoicesliberia.com/
Alpha Daffae Senkpeni is a multi-media journalist and fact checker with over 18 years’ experience. Senkpeni is the Director and Senior Editor of Local Voices Liberia (LVL) – a network that operates Liberia’s major independent fact checking desk. LVL has implemented several media development projects funded by USAID and the European Union. Since 2021, he has led the organization’s implementation of fact checking projects including fact checking workshops for journalists, media literacy programs, and community forums – all geared toward countering disinformation and expanding the culture of fact checking. Senkpeni holds a law degree from the Louis Arthur Grimes School of Law and a BSc in Mass Communications from the University of Liberia. He’s also an alumnus of the Radio Netherlands Training Center (RNTC) with a certificate in Digital Content to Counter Disinformation. He has also attended several fact checking trainings.
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