…proves claim of “dead voting” a complete fabrication – Nandlall
Accessing hundreds, if not thousands of death records for citizens across the country, is an abuse of State power and members of the coalition Administration could soon find themselves in legal hot water, over the party’s access to death records held by the General Registrar’s Office (GRO).

Former Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs, Anil Nandlall gave the damning conclusion on Tuesday, on the outskirts of the Arthur Chung Conference Centre (ACCC) where the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) is currently engaged in a recount exercise of the votes cast on March 2.
During the course of the now three weeks long activity, agents for the coalition A Partnership for National Unity/Alliance for Change (APNU/AFC), have repeatedly raised objections to votes cast on the grounds that persons would have either been dead or migrated.
Defending the coalition’s access to the death records, Caretaker Minister Cathy Hughes had told media operatives that the persons were identified by the party through its fieldwork and that the certificates were later applied for and the $300 fee paid.
An article was subsequently published in the State media on May 20, which identified a dead Essequibian as having voted despite being deceased.
The coalition’s claims not only ended when information came to light that the individual had not, in fact, been ticked off as having been issued a ballot but according to Nandlall, the family never gave permission to anyone to uplift the record.
According to the former Attorney General, he has since been in contact with the family which supplied him with a copy of the original death certificate.
That document juxtaposed against the one published by the Guyana Chronicle and held up as proof by the party, would reveal that the published document was issued on January 31 of this year.










