After yesterday’s announcement of a new phase of COVID-19 spread, Progressive Empowerment Party (PEP) leader Phillip Alexander wrote President Paula-Mae Weekes and the Elections Boundaries Commission calling for the August 10 General Election to be postponed.
In the letters, Alexander noted that the Representation of the People’s Act allows for the postponement of a poll due to - among reasons - outbreak of infectious disease.
It’s the second time PEP’s expressed concern on the need to postpone the poll.
Chief Medical Officer Dr Roshan Parasram yesterday spoke of the new phase of COVID spread. But health officials have steered clear of deeming it community spread, saying T&T still remains in the category of sporadic cases. But Parasram said the primary contacts of infected persons are in the “hundreds”. Health Minister Terrence Deyalsingh also lamented that authorities are hitting a wall when seeking information from people who are refusing to co-operate and give information for contact tracing.
Alexander’s letter to Weekes noted the deterioration in the COVID-19 spread, which he said seemed to be “mushrooming into a full-blown community spread epidemic.”
“The reason for this writing is out of concern that the General Election and everything leading up to it may have the effect of exacerbating the situation and promoting the spread of the virus to the detriment of the entire nation,” Phillip wrote.
“On polling day, a million registered voters are expected to congregate at polling stations for hours, use the same confined facilities to vote, culminating in the insertion of a finger into the security ink that could now be transformed into a virtual soup of COVID-19, creating the potential to infect everyone who uses it and everyone they subsequently come into contact with.”
He noted the EBC could be instructed to implement protocols to remedy this brewing catastrophe, including the creation of sanitisation protocols for polling stations and the addition of the extra hours to the polling day that this will require, or the postponement of the election altogether for the full 30 days allowed or more for the interruption of the transmission of the virus, a far more important issue than any other at this time.
Alexander noted Section 34 of the Representation of the People’s Act allows Weekes to adjourn holding the election for a 30-day period in the current scenario.
EBC officials had no comment yesterday on Alexander’s letter.