AFC respects the role of the media in the electoral process...unsure about commitment of others to a free, fair and open process
Read by Raphael Trotman, Leader of the AFC, Prime Ministerial Candidate
The Alliance For Change has received a draft Code of Conduct relating to the media, purportedly prepared by GECOM and intended to be signed by all contesting political parties at the upcoming General and Regional Elections. Intrinsically, the AFC has no objection in principle with the execution of one or several codes of conduct, as it has set and maintained its own standards of conduct and decorum since its formation as a Political Party in 2005; whilst other stakeholders seem bent on using every surreptitious and scurrilous device to gain votes by any means necessary.
In so far as the Media is concerned, we therefore commit to:
1. Adhere to the principle of fairness and equitable access to the media for all parties.
2. Respect the integral partnership role the media has to play in the conducting of these elections.
3. Refrain from banning any media house or any media individual operative from any press conference, rally, or political meeting open to the general public or the media.
4. Refrain from subjecting any media worker to individual ridicule or censure in the execution of their duties.
5. Refrain from directly or indirectly threatening, coercing, or otherwise subjecting to duress any media owner, publisher, manager or editor.
6. Refrain from the covert use of new media - blogs, online forums, social networks, e-mail - to circumvent or otherwise subvert our commitment to any aspect of this Code of Conduct.
The more general issues of concern that the AFC would like to see addressed in a Code of Conduct for all political parties are:
1. The guarantee equal access by representatives of contesting political parties (including scrutineers and polling day staff) to polling Stations without the fear of intimidation and malice.
2. That the Party in Power and their representatives (including Ministers) shall not combine their official visits with electioneering work, and shall not make use of official and state machinery or personnel during the conduct of these elections.
3. That Government transport including official aircraft and helicopters, vehicles, machinery and personnel shall not be used for the furtherance of the interest of the Party in Power.
4. That no contesting Political Party shall bribe eligible voters. That the independence of all state institutions that support the conduct of these elections (including but not limited to GECOM, the Advisory Commission on Broadcasting and the Media Monitoring Unit) shall be guaranteed and in the event of breaches of this code, action be taken in the interest of ensuring a free and fair poll.
The AFC is therefore not anxious to sign on to anything right now without receiving assurances from GECOM, State agencies such as the Guyana Police Force, and even the other contesting parties, that we will all conduct ourselves in an exemplary and fair manner.
The AFC sees as significant, the role of GECOM in being able to hold itself out as an independent and uncompromised agency that is capable of enforcing the Media Code that it now asks others to abide by. The AFC has not forgotten the multitude of ills committed against it in 2006 and beyond which understandably causes it to be weary of empty promises being made. For the benefit of all we repeat some of them:
· The poaching of polling agents to work for GECOM at a higher stipend;
· The payment of moneys to PPP/C and PNC/R polling agents on Election Day;
· The “miscalculation” of the Region 10 Seat to the PPP/C; and
· The non-payment of scrutineers’ money to the AFC and GAP/ROAR even after an Order of the Court of Appeal was made to do so.
The AFC will be engaging all stakeholders to address these burning issues in the days and weeks ahead with a view to arriving at a mutually convenient and acceptable Code of Conduct that we can all agree to be bound by.
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