Majority Chief Whip serves notice to block Kpandai MP from parliamentary proceedings
The Majority Chief Whip, Rockson -Nelson Dafeamekpor, has announced that the Majority Caucus will move to prevent the embattled New Patriotic Party (NPP) MP for Kpandai, Mathew Nyindam, from taking part in proceedings on the floor of Parliament.
Speaking on Accra-based Joy FM, Mr. Dafeamekpor stated that the Majority remains firm in its position and will ensure that the MP is barred from all parliamentary activities in line with the recent Tamale High Court order relating to the Kpandai parliamentary election dispute.
He explained that the decision is grounded in established parliamentary precedent and the need to uphold the authority of the courts.
“The right thing must be done, and once there is a precedent, we will insist on following it,” he said.
The move adds a new layer to the ongoing controversy surrounding the Kpandai seat, which has been the subject of heightened political and legal attention in recent weeks.
Meanwhile, the High Court has clarified the basis for its decision to order a complete rerun of the Kpandai Parliamentary election, stating that the scale of irregularities uncovered during the trial made it impossible to limit the remedy to only the 41 disputed polling stations.
Delivering the judgment, Justice Manuel Bart-Plange Brew said the inconsistencies found in the pink sheets presented by both parties were so widespread and fundamental that they “went to the roots of the results,” undermining the credibility of the entire constituency tally.
According to the judge, evidence before the court showed numerical discrepancies, conflicting tallies, illegible figures, unexplained cancellations, and mismatches between the Electoral Commission’s (EC) pink sheets and those held by the petitioner.
In one instance, a pink sheet recorded 1,422 votes in a column that had no corresponding figures, while at Kpalung Primary School, the EC’s record showed 261 votes in a slot where the petitioner’s copy listed 325.
Justice Brew noted that if such errors were present in the 41 pink sheets examined during proceedings, the court had “no way of knowing” whether the remaining 111 polling stations—whose documents were not tendered—were free from similar problems.
The ruling has faced criticism from the New Patriotic Party (NPP), with members of the Minority in Parliament questioning how a petition concerning 41 polling stations resulted in a directive to rerun the election across all 150 polling stations in the constituency.
However, the court argued that the situation was compounded by the loss, destruction, or unavailability of key electoral materials, including BVD machines and original collation documents, which made cross-verification impossible. Justice Brew further described some of the EC’s documents as “tainted,” citing interpolations, heavy ink markings, cancellations, and inconsistent handwriting that rendered the records unreliable.
Procedural concerns during collation also informed the ruling.
The court pointed to the relocation of the collation centre to Tamale without notice to the petitioner, conflicting accounts of when violence disrupted the process, and the absence of key officials at critical points in the tallying.
Justice Brew emphasised that discrepancies involving hundreds of votes cannot be dismissed as minor, stating that electoral justice cannot accommodate fundamental arithmetic errors, especially from a constitutionally mandated institution like the EC.
“The pink sheet recordings raise substantial questions as to what has happened,” he wrote, adding that the court could not “whitewash” the inconsistencies or assume that unexamined polling stations were problem-free.
He concluded that given the incomplete, inconsistent, and unreliable nature of the documentation, the only lawful and fair remedy was to order a full constituency-wide rerun of the Kpandai Parliamentary election.
Source: Classfmonline.com/Cecil Mensah
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