Attorney General (AG) Anil Nandlall has written the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM), seeking information on how private citizens’ data was provided to it by A Partnership for National Unity/Alliance For Change (APNU/AFC) during the controversial 2020 General and Regional Elections.

It is a first step in the direction of an investigation that the AG had announced last week would be held into how immigration and registration data of citizens ended up in the hands of the then ruling APNU/AFC party; data it then submitted to GECOM in an effort to discredit the voters’ list.
According to his letter addressed to GECOM Chairperson, Retired Justice Claudette Singh, Nandlall noted that APNU/AFC delivered to GECOM, documents claiming to show that dead people and persons who were overseas on Election Day, voted at the elections, as well as documents to claim that there were cases of multiple voting.
“These allegations continue to be peddled in the public domain by leaders and representatives of the aforesaid political entity. At the time and until now, the impression conveyed is that these documents and/or data were generated by and obtained from the official lawful repository of the specific information, for example, the immigration department, the Guyana Police Force and the General Registrar’s Office.”
Nandlall noted in his letter that these were grave allegations that proved to be baseless and unfounded. This is especially so since several of the persons who were included in APNU/AFC’s list as dead or migrated voters, actually came forward to dispute that party’s allegations.
“It is important that the relevant State agency enquires into the source of this information, upon whose directions they were sourced and, perhaps, most importantly, to officially reconfirm their inaccuracy, for public record. In the circumstances, I hereby request a copy of these documents to initiate this process,” Nandlall wrote.











