Countries
in Africa that have adopted Information Technology (IT) in their
electoral processes now have to deal with a new challenge, systems
hacking, which now threatens the practice of democracy in the continent,
a former President of Ghana, Mr. John Mahama, has said.
Mahama’s
disclosure came at a time Nigeria’s 2019 presidential election is
blemished with claims of alleged hacking of the electoral commission’s
IT system by both leading parties in the election – the opposition
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and ruling All Progressives Congress
(APC).
Mahama, who was the President of Ghana from 2012 to 2017,
and now the presidential candidate of Ghana’s National Democratic
Congress (NDC) for the 2020 presidential election, said at the Saïd
Business School in the University of Oxford that hacking of IT-based
electoral systems in Africa is real.
The former president delivered a lecture and equally answered questions on democracy and elections in Africa at the weekend.
The session was organised by the African Studies Centre (ASC) and Oxford Africa Business Alliance.
The Director of ASC, Prof. Wale Adebanwi, moderated the session.
Mahama
said that stakeholders and political players in the continent recently
met at the Obasanjo Presidential Library in Ogun State where the
realities of electoral hacking was revealed to them with the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS) subsequently opting to take up
the challenge.
According to him, ethnic bigotry and rising
insecurity were threats to democracy in the continent but, “other areas
of challenges in electoral systems exist and we need to look at that.”
“The
increased use of IT in elections has become topical. The use of IT in
results cancellations and the possibilities of hacking have created new
fears about the manipulation of results. Examples of this can be found
in the recent elections in Ghana, Kenya and Sierra Leone,” Mahama,
explained.
He noted: “During the last presidential election in
Ghana, the electoral commission directed its staff to stop using the
electronic transmission system to communicate results to the tallying
centre because the system had been compromised.
“The results had
to therefore be tallied manually, leading to attendant tensions and
delay of announcements of the final results. I am not aware the
electoral commission had carried out any investigation into what
compromised their electoral system, and even if they have, we the
stakeholders have not been briefed.
“We huddled recently in
Abeokuta at the Obasanjo Presidential Library with political leaders,
electoral officers, IT experts and of course, hackers, to discuss the
use of IT systems in elections and how to avoid electoral disputes
arising out of their use. Happily, I am pleased to announce that ECOWAS
has taken up the challenge from then and accepted to organise an
in-depth discussion with all stakeholders in West Africa on the use of
IT in elections.
“They showed how IT systems could be
compromised. But it is real. They are able to hack into a system and
bring it down and bring out whatever they wanted. It was eye opening and
President Obasanjo spoke to the ECOWAS.”
He said further:
“Activities of specialised organisations offering election manipulation
services have become commonplace in Africa too. As new media overtakes
the traditional mainstream media as the main source of choice for
information that influences voters’ decisions, the role of such
organisations is going to become even more crucial.”
Emphasising
that democracy must go hand-in-hand with empowering local communities
and people, Mahama stated that the spread of terrorism may undermine
Africa’s democracy. “Democracy cannot thrive in insecurity,” he added.
On
how much of impact democratic governance has had on African countries,
Mahama, noted that there was still a lot of ground to be covered on this
because according to him, democracy in the continent was still fragile,
with many vulnerable groups losing out, while citizens increasingly
question the need to participate in elections if their lives are not
impacted.
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