?Cries of election rigging came from several UNC members yesterday as they flocked in their numbers to cast their ballots at various polling booths. Some of the members said the process was so flawed that the election should be considered null and void. Others predicted that there would be legal challenges when the results were revealed. At the Grant Memorial Presbyterian School, confrontation broke out as several supporters could not find their names on the voting list, despite being confirmed at Rienzi Complex. Sandra Sookoo and her husband Ajodha Sookoo said they were listed to vote in the San Fernando East constituency by officials at Rienzi Complex, but when they arrived at the station, they were told their names were not on the list.
Sookoo said: "There is one list on the outside saying we are down to vote but when we went inside they are saying our names are not in the list so we cannot vote." Another member, Ramesh Karapan said the stamp inside the voting station was too big for the boxes on the ballot paper. He said if the paper was stamped outside of the box, then it would be considered void. He said after raising concerns, the presiding officer told him to use a pen to "X" the box. Lifetime member Francis Jaipaulsingh said he was also denied his right. Showing up his lifetime membership gold card, Jaipaulsingh said he had been with the party for years, yet when he went to cast his ballot, he was told that his name was knocked off the list. Jaipaulsingh said he had anticipated problems and had made time to go to Rienzi Complex to ensure that his name was on the list. He said he was shocked to know that he was being denied his right.
Neil Dass also said that he was registered at Rienzi Complex in December and was told that he would be voting at Grant Memorial Presbyterian School. However, he said when he arrived, he was also turned away. Similar cries were heard in Cumuto/Manzanilla, Fyzabad and Oropouche East. MP for Cumuto/Manzanilla Harry Partap said hundreds of people turned out to vote but many left disappointed. Senator Lyndira Oudit who campaigned on behalf of Kamla Persad-Bissessar said yesterday was a sad day for supporters. She said there were more than 3,000 discrepancies in the electoral process. Oudit explained that some people's names and addresses were duplicated to vote in more than one constituency. She said people could easily use contact cement to remove the ink and go elsewhere to vote twice. Saying she hoped that the process could be challenged legally, Oudit said: "It seems there is no integrity in this process...All of our concerns must be clarified." (RS)