Showing posts with label namfrel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label namfrel. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Mindanao poll fraud detailed

Poll watchers report to Comelec

By Cathy C. Yamsuan, Jolene Bulambot, Charlie Señase, Nash Maulana, Edwin Fernandez
Mindanao Bureau, Inquirer, Visayas Bureau
Last updated 02:34am (Mla time) 05/24/2007

MANILA, Philippines -- Poll watchdogs Wednesday gave detailed accounts of massive vote-buying, flagrant cheating and intimidation -- including death threats to a foreign observer -- in Mindanao during the May 14 elections.

The price of a vote ranged from P1,000 to P7,000 in some areas in Lanao del Sur province, according to the watchdogs’ accounts.

“Not even the Manila city jail can accommodate all the corrupt people in our area,” lawyer Nasser A. Marohomsalic, a member of the executive committee of the legal group Lente, told reporters.

Ranking officers of the Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting (PPCRV), National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel), Legal Network for Truthful Elections (Lente) and Citizens’ Action for Responsible Elections (C-CARE) took turns detailing how rampant cheating took place in Lanao del Sur.

The officers submitted their report to the Commission on Elections (Comelec).

The Comelec has ordered special elections in at least 13 towns in the province, where voting could not be held because of the presence of armed goons.

Marohomsalic said one supporter of a candidate in Ramain-Ditsaan town even had the audacity to offer P300 to a foreign observer, an Indonesian female he identified only as Marini.

Marohomsalic surmised that the person mistook Marini for a Filipino given her Malay features.

“Most buyers were inside the polling precincts coaching voters. Witnesses included local and foreign observers,” the watchdogs said in a statement.

250 votes each; only 169 voters

Marohomsalic said a Pakistani observer asked another person offering bribe money in exchange for votes in Bacolod-Kalawi town if what he was doing wasn’t illegal.

“The person only answered, ‘Do you want me to kill you’? (Gusto mo patayin kita?)’,” Marohomsalic said in a press conference.

Namfrel chair for Marawi City Mama B. Palawan presented an election return (ER) showing all 12 senatorial candidates of Team Unity (TU) sweeping the elections in Barangay Punod.

The TU candidates garnered 250 votes each even if the barangay only had 169 registered voters.

“Maybe even the ghosts voted there,” he remarked.

Palawan said the stranger thing was that an “unheard of” party-list group called NELFFI, or Novelty Entrepreneurship and Livelihood for Food, also swept the party-list race in the same barangay.

Watchers barred

Palawan also noted what he called an “oversupply” in ERs after getting his hands on two ERs with different serial numbers but reporting the same results in a single barangay.

There was also an ER accomplished without the signatures of any of the election inspectors save for a faded thumbmark which Palawan said looked like it was made with “a child’s thumb or a cat’s paw.”

A PPCRV volunteer identified as Nursaide Dipatuan was mauled by still unidentified men inside the campus of the Mindanao State University.

“His face was smashed,” the lawyer said.

The watchdogs’ statement said watchers of PPCRV and another group were denied access by the board of canvassers (BOCs) to polling precincts in several towns.

Marahomsalic said the BOCs were assisted by “members of the (Philippine National Police) and soldiers.”

During the provincial tabulation, said watchers from PPCRV, C-CARE, and Namfrel were not allowed to observe the tabulation of election returns held at the Lanao del Sur provincial capitol and the MSU campus.

Watchers were also barred by BOCs from monitoring the canvassing in Marawi City National High School.

No indelible ink

Other charges detailed in the report to Comelec included:

• Failure to apply indelible ink on the fingers of those who had voted.

• Proliferation of campaign materials inside the polling areas.

• Placement of ballot boxes and other election paraphernalia outside the polling precincts.

In many areas, votes were already being tabulated at the municipal level while ERs remained unaccomplished.

Marohomsalic said volunteers who were raising objections during the tallying at the precincts and during provincial canvassing were simply ignored by canvassers and election inspectors.

The disclosures of flagrant cheating in Lanao del Norte followed revelations earlier this week by a public school teacher in Maguindanao that she and other teachers were forced at gunpoint to fill out ballots with the names of TU candidates.

Lanao del Sur and Maguindanao are part of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) -- scene of alleged cheating in favor of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo during the 2004 presidential election, according to the “Hello Garci” tapes.

Comelec officials in cahoots

Fresh accounts of how cheating supposedly occurred in Maguindanao emerged Wednesday. One account came from a teacher who acted as a member of the board of election inspectors (BEI) in one town of that province.

The alleged Maguindanao fraud gave the TU candidates a sweeping 12-0 victory in the province.

Interviewed through her cellular phone on the program “Arangkada” aired over ABS-CBN-Cebu’s dyAB, the teacher, who identified herself as Bai, accused local Comelec officials, the police and the military of collusion in committing fraud.

Bai reiterated there were no elections in Maguindanao since the teachers were ordered to fill out the ballots starting at 11 p.m. on the eve of the May 14 polls.

She also said that representatives from Namfrel were prohibited from entering voting centers in Shariff Aguak.

Bai said that she knew her life, along with those of the other teachers, was in danger but she had to expose the truth.

She said two other teachers were willing to attest to her statement.

Probe welcomed

Bai said nobody went to the polling precincts on Election Day and that anyone could see that the people who supposedly had voted had no marks of the indelible ink on their fingers.

Another whistle-blower, named “Kareem,” said in Filipino on GMA television network:

“We were given a list of senators. That was what we wrote on the ballot. It was 12-0 for TU,” said Kareem.

“We were the ones who actually wrote the names on the ballots. Look at the handwriting on the ballots. Only three people did it. The handwritings were the same.”

Maguindanao provincial administrator Norie Unas said the provincial government was willing to help in the Comelec probe of alleged election fraud in the province.

“The provincial government is ready to assist them in any way to help clear the festering issue once and for all so this thing will already rest,” Unas said.

Education officials in ARMM Wednesday led hundreds of local public school teachers to the provincial capitol in Shariff Aguak to denounce the unnamed teachers who alleged there was wholesale poll fraud in the province.

“Whoever they are, they should come out into the open with their identities so as not to destroy the image of the other teachers,” local education official Udtog Kawit said.

‘Grand design’

Unas, who is also the spokesperson for Gov. Datu Andal Ampatuan, described the Maguindanao poll controversy as a “grand design” by people not happy with the TU’s 12-0 sweep in the province.

“Why blame us for this. They (the opposition) ought to be blamed for not campaigning in Maguindanao,” Unas said.

TU strategists have said the 12-0 result showed the power of the “command vote” in areas where pro-administration officials hold sway -- such as in Maguindanao, where Ampatuan is regarded as a political kingpin.

Unas bragged about Maguindanao’s “participatory democracy” under Ampatuan.

2 sets of winners

Another problem emerged Wednesday in South Upi town, also in Maguindanao, this time involving the proclamation of two sets of officials.

On May 15, local Comelec chief Monakiram Sambuang proclaimed Abdullah Campong as mayor-elect, Maria Sargan as vice mayor-elect, and eight councilors.

But a second certificate of canvass, or vote tally, showed another set of winning candidates for the town council.

Rodrigo Toriales, one of those on the first list of winners, told radio dxMS he could not understand why strange things always happened in his town.

“We are the sure winners but our names were deleted from the CoC and the Comelec put other names, why?” he asked.

Maguindanao election supervisor Lintang Bedol could not be reached for comment.

source: http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view_article.php?article_id=67616

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Namfrel suspects outside interference in count glitch

The National Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) suspects outside interference behind an Internet connection glitch that stalled its canvassing for more than 12 hours.

Namfrel secretary general Eric Alvia said Friday the watchdog group has asked its telecommunication partner to trace the source of the glitch that delayed its quick-count operation.

“Pinapaalam namin ngayon sa telecom partner namin. Sa loob, secure naman. Pinapa-trace namin ang problema sa labas (We have asked our telecom partner to trace the problem. We checked our internal network and it appeared secure. We are now having it traced to an external problem)," Alvia said in an interview on dzBB radio.

Alvia said the latest glitch was resolved at 5 a.m. Friday, with the Internet connection having been restored so the Namfrel tallying center can receive reports from the field.

But Alvia maintained that despite the glitch and a tabulation error that set back its counting, Namfrel remains on track in its quick-count operations.

He said the quick-count so far has accounted for 19 percent of the votes so far, compared to some 12 percent during the same time period in the 2004 presidential election.

“We’re ahead and on track. Nagulat kami despite the problems we’re still ahead of 04 (We’re ahead and on track compared to the same time frame in 2004. We are surprised because this is despite the problems we’ve been experiencing)," he said.

On the other hand, he said Namfrel has become even more cautious in coming out with its tallies, having its field personnel get sleep first before validating figures.

Alvia also downplayed speculations that the recent glitches and problems the poll watchdog group had experienced in past days will pull down its credibility.

Last Thursday, militant party-list groups announced they were planning their own quick-count operations to counter what they claimed was “trending" by Namfrel.

“Hindi naman. Inamin naman namin may problema, kung may problema inaamin agad namin (I don’t think our credibility will suffer. We admit problems when we see them, and we do something about it)," Alvia said. - GMANews.TV

Namfrel can't locate volunteers in Maguindanao

The National Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) can't find its volunteers in Maguindanao, the province that gave a 12-0 sweep in favor of the administration's Team Unity senatorial ticket, the poll watchdog's chairman Edward Go said Friday.

Go said during a press briefing that they still don't know if the Namfrel volunteers assigned to get the election returns from Maguindanao are missing or in danger.

The Namfrel is accredited by the Commission on Elections to do a quick-count of votes cast in the May 14 polls and is supposed to get the sixth copy of election returns.

The Maguindanao senatorial vote was topped by Ilocos Sur Governor Luis "Chavit" Singson, who has placed in the 20s in other vote counts.

No candidate from the Genuine Opposition, other non-administration parties or those running as independents made it to the Top 12 in Muslim-dominated Maguindanao, which has 336,000 registered voters.

The 13th placer was GO bet Francis "Chiz" Escudero, who tallied less than half the votes as the TU 12th placer and lone Muslim candidate Sultan Jamalul Kiram.

A top Comelec official earlier said it is considering to look into the reported irregularities that marred the voting in Maguindanao province where the administration's Team Unity bets swept all its opponents in the senatorial race.

"This is the first time I've heard of this so we will have to look at it," Commissioner Rene Sarmiento told reporters during a break in Thursday's canvassing at the Philippine International Convention Center (PICC).

Based on the Maguindanao tally, not a single opposition senatorial bet made it to the winning circle, receiving low votes in the province's 27 towns. The province has a total of 336,000 registered voters.-GMANews.TV

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Namfrel releases party-list tally

May. 16, 2007 13:26:00

Namfrel releases party-list tally

The National Movement for Free Elections has released its partial, unofficial tally for the party-list polls.

Buhay topped the 12:22 p.m. Namfrel list, with 23, 128 votes.

Posted by : Thea Alberto at Namfrel HQ in La Salle Greenhills

Abalos: TV networks to face sanctions if they continue quick count

The Commission on Elections on Wednesday asked the two television networks ABS-CBN and GMA 7 to stop their "unauthorized" quick counts.

In a press conference, Comelec Chairman Benjamin Abalos said only Namfrel (National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections) is accredited by the poll body to do a quick count.

"The stations should not do it because it confuses our people. It shows trending and we do not allow trending because they might be reporting from places favorable to their candidates of choice," he said.

"Our agreement with them is that they will report what they see, and the exit polls. This is not under the exit polls anymore. They are not supposed to consolidate votes… They are not supposed to report unofficial counts. We are requesting them to put a stop to the quick count," he added.

Abalos also noted that the sources of the numbers from the two networks are not known. He said the public has a right to correct information, "not unofficial counts."

The poll chief said the television networks might be cited for contempt if they continue with the quick count. He said the Comelec's education and information department has already made representations with the two networks.

"We will impose sanctions (if they don't follow), but I don't think they will disregard our instructions… They can be cited for contempt," he said.

"For instance, the initial count by the Comelec that we just finished, you report that and that's OK, that's reporting… The people are entitled to know from which precincts the figures are and if they're complete," he added.

Abalos said the computer schools AMA and STI are not part of the order because they are just "tools."

Earlier, Team Unity officials criticized the quick counts of the two television networks.

Posted by : Veronica Uy at PICC in Pasay City

Namfrel fixing PC software bugs that slow quick count

The quick count of the election returns may not be as quick as the National Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) may want it to be because of computer glitches that had somewhat slowed down processing of results from the field.

Namfrel said earlier on Monday that it would release an update of its quick count at around 1:30 p.m., it never happened.

Namfrel national chairman Edward Go told reporters on Tuesday that the software being used in the quick count is now being modified.

"It is a very complicated Excel program," he said when asked to elaborate on the problem they experienced.

He said they have started noticing the problem Monday night when the result of the election from different areas started coming in.

He added they reached the conclusion that something is wrong Tuesday morning.

He further said they are carefully checking the figures sent to them to avoid duplication.

"We want to make sure (there is no duplication) before we approve to upload (the figures)," he said.

Go said their people were having difficulty modifying the program because they were not the ones who developed the program.

He expects that the glitches will be solved by Wednesday and they will be in "much faster pace."

He also hoped that they will be able to cover 60 percent of the votes by Friday and end the canvassing by May 24.

"We have to move out by May 24 because La Salle Greenhills have committed the place (to other people)," he said.

If they will not be able to finish the canvassing by that time, he said they will transfer to another site just to continue counting the votes.

"We cannot jeopardize accuracy," he said.

He said in 2004 elections they were able to tabulate 83 percent of the election returns they received.

Nevertheless, he is still wishing that they had a smoother and faster canvassing for the first day.

Namfrel to file protest against alleged Comelec lawyer

The National Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) is condemning the arrest of one of their district chairpersons in Caloocan City early Tuesday by a Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) Team, led by a woman identifying herself as a lawyer for the Commission on Elections (Comelec).

Namfrel will file a letter of complaint to the Comelec for the wrongful detention of Namfrel Caloocan District Chair Jom Curio by a certain Melanie Malaya, who identified herself as a Comelec lawyer.

Namfrel National Chair Edward Go also said they will be requesting the Philippine National Police and the Integrated Bar of the Philippines to administer the fullest force of the law against Malaya.

“We don’t want this incident to happen again to any of our volunteers who are just doing their job,” Go said.

Narrating his experience during the latest Namfrel press conference, Curio said that the arrest happened around 2 a.m. while he was retrieving a third batch of the sixth copy of the election returns (ER).

Malaya insisted that Curio was not entitled to obtain the ERs, despite showing all identification cards and accreditation letters. Curio said he was later led to a detention room near the polling precinct. Malaya broke down during his narration, arguing that he was illegally detained while doing his job.

Curio said he was released after an hour but held his ground near in Caloocan to continue his duties. He added that four to five ERs taken from him disappeared, along with Malaya.

Posted by : Alex Villafania at the Namfrel HQ in La Salle Greenhills

PNP, Comelec urged: Investigate ambush of Namfrel volunteer

National Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) chairman Edward Go is asking the Commission on Elections and the Philippine National Police “to commit its best resources to the investigation and prosecution of the persons responsible” on the ambush of their volunteer in Abra.

Namfrel volunteer Ronable Alinday was injured during the ambush at Lagayan, Abra, a day before election day.

"The initial investigation led us to believe that the ambush, audaciously carried out even if the victims were escorted by PNP personnel, was conducted by private armed groups," said Go in a press conference.

Posted by : Thea Alberto at the Namfrel HQ in La Salle Greenhiils

'Software problems' slowing count -- Namfrel

May. 15, 2007 16:53:00

'Software problems' slowing count -- Namfrel

"Software problems" have been slowing down the quick count operations of the National Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel), the chairman of the poll watchdog group admitted Tuesday.

"I have to say there have been some software problems," said Go at a press conference.

Go said Namfrel volunteers "had to modify the program" on Tuesday morning. But aside from the software problem, he also admitted an apparent lack of training of volunteers.

Namfrel uses Microsoft Excel, said Go.

"I thought there were people who have perfected the systems already [but] we've never tested the program, [which was] developed by Muntinlupa for the 2004 [presidential] elections," said Go, who assumed Namfrel chairmanship on April 13.

He said the volunteers had to remove the slots for president and vice president slots.

The Namfrel chairman also attributed the slow count to the delayed transmission of data from precincts all over the country.

"They have not transmitted the data as quickly as it happens," said Go, explaining that Namfrel tallies are based on election returns from municipalities.

"We are now shifting to reporting by ERs [election returns] so we make sure it [tally] is clean before we upload," said Go.

Namfrel last released an unofficial, partial tally shortly before lunch, an update of its 9: 40 am tally.

Namfrel is expected to release its latest count around 5 p.m. Tuesday.

Posted by : Thea Alberto at Namfrel Headquarters in La Salle Greenhills

Friday, May 11, 2007

Namfrel to be given canvass copy

THE National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections will get a copy of the certificate of canvass on top of the seventh copy of election returns to ensure a more credible quick count, a leader of the volunteer group said yesterday.

“Armed with the election returns and the certificates of canvass, we can assure the public that the quick count will be accurate and credible,” said Christian Monsod of One Voice, which is part of the Namfrel network that will do the parallel count.

Namfrel last received copies of the certificates of canvass in 1992 and used them to check the accuracy of the quick count that was based on election returns.

Another Namfrel volunteer, Eddie Nuque, said Namfrel would also be able to compare the summary of votes from the city, municipal and provincial levels with the election returns.

Nuque’s group, Legal Network for Truthful Elections, is part of the Namfrel quick count. It has 5,000 to 6,000 volunteers to monitor the elections, but needs 4,000 more to cover all precincts at the regional level nationwide.

On Saturday, Namfrel chapters will hold a national assembly to prepare for the seven-day quick count.

Namfrel aims to tabulate 100 percent of the election returns across the country with a 1:1 ratio of volunteers and poll precincts.

Volunteers will then transmit the election returns and certificates of canvass to the Namfrel center at the La Salle Greenhills for tabulation after Election Day.

Namfrel co-chairman for Metro Manila, Danny Magbual, said preparations were going smoothly despite minor hitches.

The country’s official poll watchdog will start setting up equipment and other paraphernalia for the May 14 election monitoring and countdown at their headquarters at the La Salle Greenhills in San Juan.

Magbual said Namfrel would also set up a public assistance desk to gather feedback from voters on the conduct of the elections.

Magbual said that the Commission on Elections was on schedule in distributing election materials—tally sheets, indelible ink, ballpens and stamp pads—to the 224,748 polling precincts in the country that started a week ago.

Other election materials such as official ballots, election returns, and certificates of canvass are expected to be released by the Comelec today in polling precincts for the far-flung regions and on the eve of Election Day in Metro Manila and its neighboring areas.

Based on Namfrel’s records, 45,029,668 voters are expected to troop to the polling places on Monday, Election Day. Joyce Pangco Pañares and Romie A. Evangelista

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Poll watchdogs learn from Garci: Focus on canvass

MANILA, Philippines

It's the canvassing, stupid.

That's the lesson of "Hello Garci," according to independent poll watchers mobilizing to guard against fraud in the May 14 elections.

In the past, watchers tended to focus more on the conduct of elections -- on the counting at the precinct level and on the integrity of the election returns (ERs), said Carlos Medina, one of the convenors of the newly organized Lente (Legal Network for Truthful Elections).

An ER is the document on which is tallied the 200-250 votes cast per precinct.

"Before there was dagdag-bawas (vote-padding and -shaving), we thought that cheating was mostly done on election day itself, through vote-buying, flying voters, etc., and during the counting. But it is at the canvassing that wholesale fraud is committed; so the 'lesson' is not to lose focus come canvassing time," he said.

Eric Alvia, secretary general of the National Citizens' Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel), echoed Medina's concern: "We only focused on ERs before."

With the country still stuck with manual elections, it takes days for volunteers to start spotting discrepancies between individual ERs and the resulting Certificates of Canvass (COCs), the tally of ERs gathered in a municipality or city, he lamented.

By the time municipal, city and provincial COCs start coming out, "two to four weeks" had already passed since Election Day.

Human interventions

In that span of time, Alvia said, a lot of "human interventions" could have taken place -- the bribery of canvassing board members, tampering or switching of COCs.

And by then, at the height of the canvassing process, the number of active Namfrel volunteers would have dropped to "25 percent" of their original size during Election Day.

"Only one out of four volunteers would still be reporting. The rest would have returned to their jobs, businesses, schools," Alvia said.

Their ranks have so thinned that there would be no one left to "return to the municipality or city" where the discrepancies occurred and produce the ERs covered by questionable COCs. (An ER is considered the more reliable source document since it was produced "closest" to the polling day, executed by the teachers who oversaw the balloting.)

"Who else can we give instructions to?" Alvia said. Namfrel may have accumulated data possibly indicating massive fraud, yet that data could not be "acted upon" quickly enough for lack of personnel.

Missing element

With Lente around, perhaps this missing element would now be in place -- a recognized, nonpartisan legal team that can immediately file a manifestation or protest based on the information gathered by the other volunteers, Alvia said.

While the watchers have the zeal, the power of faith, and probably the numbers to cover enough ground, they realize they are up against formidable, mostly unseen forces capable of pulling off another "Hello Garci."

With "lessons" learned from the "Garci" scandal, the poll watchers undoubtedly need to retool against increasingly sophisticated modes of cheating, whether these are done at the precincts, at the canvassing boards or, worse, in higher circles only wiretapping experts can penetrate.

After all, it still took political insiders, intelligence operators, and partisan figures -- not whistle-blowers from the ranks of poll watchers -- to pry the Garci scandal wide open in June 2005, more than a year after the May 2004 presidential elections.

Wiretapped conversations purportedly between President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and former Election Commissioner Virgilio Garcillano were made public, indicating she may have stolen the 2004 presidential election. The President and Garcillano have denied any wrongdoing.

1st time: Lawyers as poll watchers

Lente, the new group joining the old watchdogs like Namfrel and the Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting (PPCRV), believes that adding lawyers, paralegals and law students to the army of poll watchers could significantly deter any schemes to manipulate the election results.

That army includes half a million volunteers called to action by the Catholic Church in the country.

"Whatever they may be planning out there, we will be waiting when they start to implement it on the ground," said Medina. "With our presence, they better come up with other ideas."

Medina, a law professor who is also executive director of the Ateneo Human Rights Center, said the coming elections would mark the first time lawyers would form part of the poll-watching "structure."

In previous elections, lawyers figured in the canvassing mainly as private attorneys for the competing politicians. This time, Medina said, there will be Lente members working simultaneously with Namfrel or PPCRV volunteers, the latter being mostly laypersons not versed in the legal technicalities of a poll canvass.

Lente, which aims to deploy at least 9,600 lawyers, paralegals or law students nationwide, can be most useful in applying the "lessons" poll watchers have learned from the "Garci" episode, he said.

Numerical tricks

Just what are those numerical tricks poll watchers are trained to spot when examining ERs and COCs? Alvia gave actual samples that Namfrel has culled from past elections:

• The figure "lllll-ll" got written as "five two" instead of "seven." This was spotted in Marikina in 1998.

• The numeral "19" got written as "ninety." It happened in Manila in the 2001 polls.

• With just two strokes of a pen, "1,382" in the municipal COC became "4,382" in the provincial COC; Zamboanga del Norte, 2001.

• "2,599" grew almost five-fold and became "12,599," while "13,784" morphed into "28,784." This was documented in two towns in Pangasinan in 1995. Twenty-two other towns in that province produced a total of 112,994 "extra" votes.

• And in the 2004 elections, this was encountered in Tawi-Tawi: With already 89 percent of the votes canvassed in the Namfrel Quick Count, Presidential Candidate A had garnered only 15,925 votes against Candidate B's 58,292 votes. B was thus enjoying an insurmountable lead of 42,367 votes.

But after the remaining 11 percent or 9,553 votes were canvassed, the official tally showed B getting a total of over 49,803 votes over A's 33,634 votes. B still won in the province, yes, but by a much narrower margin.

This was because about 31,000 votes cast for B went instead to A, Alvia said. Similar occurrences were also observed in seven other provinces in Mindanao, wherein a total of 598,560 "B" votes got moved to the "A" column.

Known forms of cheating

There are forms of cheating which poll watchers can easily detect, he said, such as vote-buying, the use of "flying voters," ballot-box switching, and various tactics to sow confusion, delay the process, or discourage people from trooping to the poll booths.

But beyond the precincts, there would be hazy areas way outside their radar. Alvia wondered: What if candidates themselves connive to engage in dagdag-bawas? A winning senatorial candidate with a safe lead willing to donate some of his votes to a party mate so the latter can make it to the Magic 12?

"Of course, we cannot -- and will not -- monitor phone calls. That's not part of our mandate," said former Ambassador Henrietta de Villa, PPCRV national chair.

As the accredited citizen arm of the Comelec, the Church-based group aims to deploy half-a-million volunteers or at least two per precinct nationwide. Established in 1992, it will be monitoring its 16th elections this May 14.

"But we can't be frustrated. What we are doing is living a part of our (Catholic) faith. Our mere presence is about restoring credibility to our elections, otherwise more and more will just shy away from them," De Villa said.

( www.inquirer.net )

Monday, May 7, 2007

'No local Namfrel quick count'

'No local Namfrel quick count'
BY CHRYSEE SAMILLANO - Bacolod City, Philippines (Visayan Daily Star)
http://www.visayandailystar.com/2007/May/07/topstory6.htm

The National Movement for Free Elections in Bacolod City will only conduct a "quick count" on senatorial candidates, Bacolod Comelec registrar Mavil Majarucon said.

She said Social Action Center director Fr. Aniceto Buenafe has informed her that the quick count of the national candidates will be done at the Bishop's House. She said that due to time constraints, NAMFREL could not deploy watchers in the polling precincts in the May 14 elections. Majarucon said she has informed the Department of Education through the Board of Election Inspectors, that NAMFREL will get their copies of the election returns at the Bays Center where they will be putting up a desk.

She said the list of BEI's were finalized last week and she has instructed her election assistants to provide copies to political parties like the Lakas and Nationalist People's Coalition that have pending requests with her office, for transparency.

Majarucon said three BEI's will be assigned to each precinct in Bacolod City

Meanwhile, Majarucon said she has only received 500 Election Day Computerized Voter's List from Comelec Manila and they still lack 1,197 for the total 1,697 precincts. The EDCVL contains the biometric data of voters, she said.

However, she perceives no problem during elections since they have already posted in the different barangays the list of voters for them to know their precinct numbers, Majarucon said. They have also conducted Voter's Information drives in the malls, she said.

Majarucon again appealed to the public to check the list of their precinct numbers in their barangays so they will have no problem locating them during the May 14 election.*CGS

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Banker Edward S. Go takes over as Chairman of Namfrel

By FIL C. SIONIL

Veteran banker Edward S. Go has assumed the chairmanship of the National Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) which is accredited by the Commission on Elections (Comelec) to conduct its own voting tabulation.

From its inception 23 years ago, Namfrel had been headed by industrialist and former trade and industry secretary Jose Concepcion Jr.

Concepcion was honored during the Namfrel National Assembly "for his outstanding achievements as chairman of the Namfrel," a poll watchdog he founded during the last years of the Marcos era to safeguard the integrity of the electoral process.

As a barangay chairman of Forbes Park in Makati City, Concepcion is covered by the Comelec ban prohibiting elected officials from holding a position in Namfrel.

Go was treasurer of Namfrel in the last two elections. He was recommended by Concepcion as his successor in the private poll watchdog.

In an interview, Go said Namfrel will be teaming up with the National Secretariat for Social Action for the quick count at the De La Salle gymnasium, in Ortigas, Greenhills.

Aside from tabulating the votes of the senatorial, congressional and local elections, Go said the quick count will collate the votes for party-list sectoral representation in Congress..

Namfrel will be given the sixth copy of the certificate of elections return which will be the basis for its tabulations.

"We will do this as quickly as we can. But Namfrel will not sacrifice accuracy for quickness," said Go.

Meanwhile, Go is soliciting private sector assistance to help finance Namfrel’s costs.

Namfrel has already obtained the commitment of food and beverage conglomerate, San Miguel Corporation, the Ayala Corporation, and the Lopez Group of Companies.

Telecommunications-giant, Philippine Long Distance Company (PLDT) has offered to handle the communications aspect of the quick count.

As a former president of the Bankers Association of the Philippines, Go is looking forward to tapping the assistance of his former colleagues in the industry.

Go, who will turn 69 this July, described himself as "semi-retired" since he left his last banking post as chair of United Coconut Planters’ Bank (UCPB). Before UCPB, Go was executive director of Global Business Bank; president and chief operating officer of Asian Bank, and chairman and chief executive officer of China Banking Corporation.

A graduate of Bachelor of Arts magna cum laude from the Ateneo de Manila University, Go is an honorary consul for the Republic of Senegal.

He also sits on the board of various private sector firms, among them, Metro Pacific Corporation; Negros Navigation Co., Inc.; Mighty Beaut Minerals, Inc. of Canada; and Philippine Telephone Corporation, the sister-company of PLDT.

He is also the chairman of Hyundai Asia Resources, Inc.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Machinery for Cheating in ARMM Being Laid Out - Dalidig

Hadji Abdullah Dalidig, the Namfrel officer in Lanao del Sur who testified before the Senate in 2005 about the manipulation of election results in his province during the May 2004 elections said that the very same machinery and practices are being put into place in preparation for the May 2007 elections.

BY DABET CASTAÑEDA
Bulatlat
In the Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), flying voters are paid P200 each ($4.21 at an exchange rate of $1=P47.46) to register in as many precincts as possible, Hadji Abdullah Dalidig said in an interview with Bulatlat.

Dalidig is the controversial Namfrel (National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections) officer in Lanao del Sur who testified before the Senate in 2005 about the manipulation of election results in his province during the May 2004 presidential elections. In his testimony before the Senate, Dalidig said the May 2004 presidential elections was the “dirtiest” of all five elections he has monitored in Lanao del Sur.

Daligdig said that these newly-recruited flying voters would augment the flying voters who registered for the May 2004 elections but “have not been deleted” from the official list of registered voters. Records from the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) shows there are 100,000 more registered voters for the 2007 elections than in 2004 in Lanao del Sur.

Hadji Abdullah Dalidig, ex-Namfrel official and Lanao del Sur poll fraud whistleblower


“I doubt that the May 2007 elections will be credible,” the Namfrel officer said. Dalidig will again serve as Namfrel officer in Lanao del Sur for the coming elections. The COMELEC approved the petition of Namfrel to conduct a quick count of the results of the May 2007 elections.

Lanao del Sur is one of the five provinces of the ARMM together with Basilan, Maguindanao, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi.

As of April 28, 2004, the number of registered voters in ARMM is 1,057,458. Lanao del Sur registered the second highest number of registered voters (275,572) from among the five ARMM provinces.

Vote buying

Vote buying is also rampant in ARMM, Dalidig said.

In fact, he said a powerful political clan in ARMM, which is aligned with the Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo administration has allegedly sworn to give each mayor a cash incentive of P1 million ($21,070) each if Team Unity, the administration’s senatorial slate, wins 12-0 in their respective municipalities.

Another source, whose name is withheld for security reasons, said the same powerful clan is allegedly Macapagal-Arroyo’s “cheating operator in ARMM.” The clan has allegedly received P60 million ($1,264,222) from three wealthy senatorial bets of the administration to ensure their win in the region. The said clan has also allegedly received P200 million ($4,214,075) from the administration to ensure a 12-0 win for Team Unity, the source said.

To ensure the “grand plan” for cheating in the May 2007 elections in ARMM, the source said, a member of the clan will be appointed as the seventh COMELEC commissioner just before the May 2007 elections. The new appointee will replace Virgilio Garcillano or “Garci,” the COMELEC official caught on tape talking with Macapagal –Arroyo in the infamous “Hello, Garci” scandal. In the said tape, the president was allegedly overheard asking Garcillano to make sure she leads by one million votes over her rival, actor Fernando Poe Jr., in the May 2004 presidential elections. Bulatlat

Treasurers’ reshuffle set in NCR

Soldiers start casting their ballots in advance voting Reshuffle of Metro Manila treasurers okayed by DoF

By ARIS R. ILAGAN

The Department of Finance (DoF) has approved the recommendation of the National Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) and the Philippine Election Forum (PEF) to reshuffle all the city and municipal treasurers in Metro Manila to spare them from possible political pressure from candidates in the May 14 elections.


In a speech during the Namfrel General Assembly at the Traders Hotel in Pasay City, Dr. Vic Endriga, head of the Philippine Association of Local Treasurers and Assessors (PHALTRA), said teachers with poll duties in the May 14 elections will be given their allowance when they get the ballot boxes.

The Department of Budget and Management (DBM) has already approved the release of funds, Endriga said.

"Now with the proposal of Namfrel to reshuffle all treasurers nationwide, we would like to announce that partially, it is already being done," Endriga told Namfrel members, representatives of government agencies, and other volunteers in ensuring the conduct of clean, honest, and peaceful elections.

"All of the treasurers from the National Capital Region will be reshuffled," Endriga said. The treasurers in cities and municipalities officially receive election paraphernalia including ballots and ballot boxes from the Comelec, and are duty-bound to do safekeeping work on the ballots and election returns for the poll body.

Among those present in the gathering were Comelec Commisioner Resurreccion Borra, Namfrel national chairman Edward Go, Namfrel founding chairman Jose S. Concepcion Jr., Namfrel national co-chairman Bishop Dinualdo Gutierrez, and Philippine National Police National Task Force HOPE (Honest, Orderly and Peaceful Elections) head Deputy Director General Antonio Billiones.

Endriga, city treasurer of Quezon City, said that he already received notice that he will be re-assigned to Makati City.

The city and municipal treasurers had been deputized by the Comelec to prepare election materials and paraphernalia for distribution to polling precincts.

While still waiting for Comelec approval of the reshuffle, municipal and city treasurers in Metro Manila have began preparing for their transfers, Endriga said.

He said that the Namfrel, through the PEF, had earlier recommended the reshuffle of city and municipal treasurers in different parts of the country 15 days before Election Day to prevent them from being influenced by political candidates.

The Namfrel and the PEF recommended to the Comelec that the city and municipal treasurers stay in their post 15 days more after Election Day.

Endriga expressed optimism that the reshuffle of treasurers will not only be implemented in Metro Manila, but also in other parts of the country to ensure clean and fair elections this year.

On the early release of allowances for teachers with poll duties, Endriga said: "This is very good news. For the first time in the history of elections, the teachers will immediately get their allowances on the day they get the ballot boxes."

Under the new scheme, 50 percent of the total R3,000 election allowance, or R1,500, will be given to the teachers on the first day they assume their poll duties and the balance of R 1,500 will be paid immediately when they return the ballot boxes.

Aside from the timely pay of election allowances, Endriga said the teachers will also receive R300 transportation allowance.

During previous elections, government was swarmed with complaints from public school teachers about the delay in the release of the allowance for poll duties, some complaining they got their allowances four months after the elections.


900 soldiers expected to vote in local absentee voting


The six-day local "absentee voting" for Philippine Army personnel started yesterday in Fort Bonifacio to allow the soldiers to provide support to the Philippine National Police (PNP) during the May 14 elections without depriving them of their right to vote.

Lt. Col. Ernesto Torres, Philippine Army spokesman, said about 900 Army soldiers who applied for "absentee voting" privileges were expected at polling places inside Fort Bonifacio.

Torres said that another round of absentee voting will be conducted for Army soldiers from May 4 to May 6.

The Commission on Elections (Comelec) has allowed "absentee voting" for members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines who are expected to be assigned to far- flung areas to ensure the conduct of honest, orderly, and peaceful May 14 elections.

The Comelec is also authorized to order the deployment of troops in critical areas where private armed groups, communist insurgents, secessionist rebels, and terrorist elements might disrupt the electoral process.

"The AFP would continue to review and assess the situation to determine if there is a need to maintain, increase, or reduce the deployment of troops in some areas," Gen. Hermogenes Esperon Jr., AFP chief of staff, said.

The deployment of soldiers in critical areas considered by Comelec as "areas of immediate concern" will depend on the recommendation of the PNP.

"We thank all those who are with us in advocating for educated voters. However, we shall give priority to Comelec-ordered deployments, especially where there will be a serious armed threat or violence due to intense political rivalry," Esperon said.

In a telephone interview, Torres said that the absentee voting was being watched by representatives of the Comelec in Fort Bonifacio.

He said that top Army officers had ealier instructed Army commanders "to encourage their subordinates to take part in the absentee voting in anticipation of possible election duties as required by the Comelec on Election Day and after." (Aris R. Ilagan)


Low turnout seen on first day of local absentee voting


By E.T. SUAREZ


The six-day local absentee or advance voting for 39,580 military, police and government employees who have poll duties on May 14 was off to a smooth start yesterday but yielded a relatively low turnout, the Commission on Elections said.

The low turnout was reported even in areas where thousands had applied to vote in advance such as Region 9 (Western Mindanao), Region 11 (Northern Mindanao), Region 5 (Bicol), Region 4A (Southern Tagalog), and Region 8 (Eastern Visayas).

Records at the Commission on Elections (Comelec) Committee on Local Absentee Voting headed by Commissioner Florentino A. Tuason Jr. showed that of the 6,704 in Western Mindanao who applied to vote in advance, 5,162 have been approved, while of the 6,997 applicants in Northern Mindanao, 4,624 have been approved.

The other regions with high number of applicants approved for local absentee voting but yielded a low turnout on the first day are Bicol with 3,795 advance voters, Southern Tagalog 4A with 3,775, and Eastern Visayas with 3,704.

The other regions and their corresponding number of local absentee voters are National Capital Region (NCR), 2,054; Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR), 396; Ilocos, 523; Cagayan Valley, 1,786; Central Luzon, 2,085; Southern Tagalog-B, 1,305; Western Visayas, 2,359; Central Visayas, 833; Southern Mindanao, 1,291; Central Mindanao, 2,673; Caraga, 1,050; and Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), 2,027.

Members of the Committee on Local Absentee Voting are confident the turnout out will improve in the next five days.

Tuason said those who applied for advance voting but have not yet voted could do so today and on April 30, and May 4, 5 and 6.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Namfrel appeals Concepcion removal from roster

MANILA, Philippines -- The National Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) has asked the Commission on Elections to re-examine its decision to accredit the poll watchdog on condition its former chairman, Jose Concepcion, be removed from the organization.

In its manifestation submitted April 19, a copy of which was obtained by INQUIRER.net, Namfrel argued against the legality of requiring Concepcion's removal, calling it "arbitrary and discriminatory."

Concepcion's removal from the organization was based on his being chairman of Barangay (village) Forbes in Makati City.

But Namrel lawyer Jose Bernas said the laws cited by Comelec only prohibit barangay officials from being appointed as members of boards of election inspectors (BEIs) or poll watchers of any political party.

The Comelec condition for Namfrel's accreditation was based on a Resolution 7798, which was derived from Executive Order (EO) 94 issued by former president Corazon Aquino on December 17, 1986.

"This directive imposed a prohibition on the appointment of barangay officials as members of BEIs or as official watcher of each duly registered major political party or any socio-civic, religious, professional or any similar organization," the Namfrel manifestation said.

It also stressed that EO 94 applied only to the February 2, 1987 plebiscite.

The Namfrel manifestation also argued that the prohibitions contained in the EO 94 are clear.

"The chairman of Namfrel is not and will not be appointed as a member or the BEI or as a poll watcher of any political party. Accordingly, the prohibition under Executive Order 94 does not apply to him," it added.

"Clearly, Comelec Resolution 7798 was not based on law and is therefore arbitrary and discriminatory. Neither can a Comelec resolution supplant nor go beyond the mandates of a law for the simple reason that Comelec has no lawmaking powers," it said.

It argued that the Namfrel chairman does not stay in the precincts, as he only oversees the overall conduct of quick count.

"Thus there is no danger of the Namfrel chairman interfering in the proceedings of the BEIs, whether as a member thereof or as a poll watcher. Moreover, as chairman of Barangay Forbes, the Namfrel chairman cannot be presumed to have such 'influence' over all electoral precincts nationwide," it said.

Meanwhile, Namfrel also announced in a separate manifestation to the Comelec that it had agreed to work with the National Secretariat for Social Action, Justice and Peace (NASSA). Both groups entered into an agreement on April 18.

Bishop Dinualdo Gutierrez agreed to remain co-chairman of Namfrel. (www.inquirer.net)

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Catholic Church arm to help Namfrel do quick-count

The Catholic Church will help poll watchdog National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) conduct its “quick count" for the May 14 polls.

Namfrel Chairman Edward Go said under a deal he signed on April 18 with Bishop Dinualdo Gutierrez, director of the Church’s National Secretariat for Social Action, Justice and Peace (Nassa), seeks to combine their manpower to quickly produce the elections' unofficial results.

Nassa, social arm of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), earlier unsuccessfully vied to do the quick count.

"There are regions in the country where (one of either of our groups) has a better presence. There are also areas where we jointly manage. We want to use the best of both
organizations. We want to (cover all the gaps)," said Go.

Go replaced businessman Jose Concepcion as Namfrel chairman on April 13 after the Comelec made his resignation a prerequisite for the poll watchdog’s accreditation as quick count arm.

The Comelec noted that Concepcion is not allowed to head a citizens arm because he is an elected official, being village chairman of posh Barangay Forbes Park in Makati City.

In April 2, the Comelec voted 4-2 in favor of Namfrel doing the quick-count, effectively junking NASSA’s separate application. -GMANews.TV