Comelec cancels PWD voter registration for ARMM listing
Last
year, National Disability Prevention and Rehabilitation Week was
also National PWD Registration Week.
(Photo by MARIO IGNACIO IV) |
By ARTHA KIRA PAREDES /
VERA Files
June 20, 2012
The special registration for persons with disabilities (PWDs)
nationwide set for next month will be called off following the
Commission on Elections’ decision to give priority to voter
registration in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM).
Comelec Resolution 9443 suspended all ongoing registrations from June
25 to July 31, including the National Special Registration for PWDs
originally planned for July 21. The country marks the 34th National
Disability Prevention and Rehabilitation (NDPR) Week from July 17 to
23.
The Comelec is holding a general registration of voters in ARMM from
July 9 to 18. It said it would transfer personnel and biometrics
machines from non-ARMM areas to the registration centers in the five
ARMM provinces: Lanao del Sur, Maguindanao, Basilan, Sulu and
Tawi-Tawi.
On June 11, three days after Resolution 9443 was issued, Congress
annulled the ARMM voters book that contained more than 1.7 million
voters. Joint Resolution No. 3 approved by the Senate and the House of
Representatives said the book contained “hundreds of thousands of
illegal and fictitious registrants.”
ARMM has two cities, 113 municipalities and 2,470 barangays. As of
2007, the total population in the region was 4.1 million.
Comelec spokesperson James Jimenez said about a thousand voter
registration machines, including several new ones, and a still
undetermined number of personnel from Comelec offices nationwide will
be deployed to the ARMM for the general voter registration.
Although the ARMM general voter registration will last only nine days,
Comelec still has “a lot of things to do” before and after the actual
registration, including hearings of the Election Registration Board
and the cleansing of the Automated Fingerprint Identification System,
he said.
“The work of the Comelec doesn’t end with the last day of the filing,”
he added.
Jimenez also clarified that although the scheduled PWD registrations
will be affected, PWD voters can register anytime after July 31, as
long as they do so before the deadline on Oct. 31.
The Alyansa ng may Kapansanang -Pinoy (AKAP-Pinoy), which planned the
National Special Registration for PWD Voters with the Parish for
Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting (PPCRV), said it is “still
figuring out what can be done.”
AKAP-Pinoy is a national federation of 450 organizations of PWDs (DPOs)
nationwide. “It happens, there is nothing we can do but re-program,”
Manuel V. Agcaoili, AKAP-Pinoy chairman, said, adding that getting
upset will not provide any solution.
He also said Comelec has proposed to hold a special nationwide
registration in mid-August instead and that it has committed to
continue supporting the registration of PWDs until October.
The latest official results from Comelec show some 345,000 registered
PWD voters nationwide. Special registrations were held in Visayas in
March, Mindanao in April and Luzon in May. Results from the latest
registrations are still being tallied.
Emerito Rojas, the PWD sectoral representative of the National
Anti-Poverty Commission (NAPC), described the cancellation of special
PWD registration on July “unfortunate.”
“Many PWDs are looking forward that the special registration shall be
scheduled again in the future. The right to suffrage of PWDs must be
fully realize(d),” said Rojas, president of the New Vois Association
of the Philippines (NVAP).
Article V, Section 1 of the Constitution states that “suffrage may be
exercised by all citizens of the Philippines not otherwise
disqualified by law” and that “no literacy, property, or other
substantive requirement shall be imposed on the exercise of suffrage.”
It mandates Congress to design a procedure for PWDs and the
illiterates to vote without the assistance of other persons. “Until
then, they shall be allowed to vote under existing laws and such rules
as the Commission on Elections may promulgate to protect the secrecy
of the Ballot,” according to the Constitution.
The third week of July was proclaimed as NDPR Week through
Proclamation No. 1870 signed in 1979 by then President Ferdinand
Marcos. In 2002, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo issued
Administrative Order 35 that directed “all departments, bureaus,
government-owned and/or controlled corporations, government financial
institutions, local government units, state universities/colleges and
schools, and other government agencies/instrumentalities to promote
and conduct relevant activities during the annual observance” of NDPR.
The theme for this year’s NDPR celebration is “Mainstreaming Persons
with Disabilities in Economic Development.”
The concept paper prepared by NCDA states the theme aims to promote of
the “full employment” of PWDs and “to tackle barriers and gaps,
facilitate stakeholders’ cooperation, develop innovative approaches
and support human rights-based initiatives for the economic
development of persons with disabilities.”
Some of NCDA’s planned activities include Early Prevention of Children
with Disabilities and the first Road Safety Seminar for PWDs on July
19, Orientation-Forum on Accessibility Law with Sensitivity Training
on July 20 and the weeklong “Likhang PWD 2012” exhibit of PWD art and
products.
Last year, Comelec declared July 18 to 23, 2011 as National PWD
Registration Week.