All visually impaired persons who qualify to vote in this year’s general
elections will have unhindered access to cast their ballot at all the
polling stations across the country.
Although the Electoral
Commission provided tactile ballot jacket for in the last general
elections, some persons with visual impairment claimed they were
disenfranchised due to the absence of tactile ballot jackets at some
polling stations.
But the Head of Gender and Disability at the
Electoral Commission, Abigail Nutakor, told 3News Tuesday the Commission
has procured enough tactile ballot jacket for all polling stations to
enable those with visual impairment cast their vote unhindered.
What is tactile ballot jacket?
She
described the tactile ballot jacket as a cardboard folder with raised
dots arranged numerically to represent the positions of each of the
candidates on the ballot paper. Besides each numerical arrangement is a
corresponding window, which is big enough to accommodate the thumb for
voting.
The tactile ballot jacket has been designed to easily
identify the top with a notch to avoid a mix up in the event it is
turned upside down. Users are also guided with a perforated edge of the
ballot paper to identify the top as well.
Blind or partially
sighted voters independently slot the ballot paper into the tactile
folder and with the help of the numerically arranged raised dots, select
they their preferred candidate and consequently cast their vote by
thumb printing in the window provided. Two tactile jacket for each
polling station
Ms Nutakor said each polling station will have
two tactile ballot jacket in the December 7 elections, explaining that
one will be for the presidential and the other for the parliamentary
election.
She said the jackets for the parliamentary election
are made constituency-specific, which she said will be dependent on the
number of candidates on the ballot paper. That of the presidential
election will be standard across the country since the presidential
candidates are the same throughout the constituencies across the
country.
Meanwile, Ms Nutakor says physically challenged persons
are who turn up to cast their votes will not be obliged to joins queues
at the various polling stations
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