Attitudinal, environmental barriers hinder transgender people, women & PWDs from observing general elections 2018

Preliminary Findings of Experiential Study by Coalition for Inclusive Pakistan (CIP)

ISLAMABAD, September 25, 2018: Despite progressive legislative and policy measures to facilitate participation of transgender people, women and persons with disabilities (PWDs) in the electoral processes, these individuals faced attitudinal and environmental barriers in the exercise of their right to vote and to observe elections on an equal basis with others during General Elections 2018.

Preliminary findings of experiential study conducted by the Coalition for Inclusive Pakistan, (CIP) suggest that voters with disabilities and disabled election observers largely found polling stations inaccessible but the attitudes of police, security staff and polling staff were helpful and voters with disabilities were given preference in casting their votes as required by the Elections Act, 2017.  The study also shows that while the provision of allowing voters with disabilities to cast their votes through postal ballots is a step in the right direction, disabled voters found the process of casting vote through postal ballot cumbersome and confusing.  However, it would emerge from the detailed analysis of the experiences shared by Election-Day Observers (EDOs) and voters as to what extent these and voters with disabilities faced attitudes of pity or respect or any other attitudes.

The study suggests that transgender voters found law enforcement officials helpful and were given preferential treatment by polling staff in casting their votes in Islamabad, Lahore and Karachi whereas the incidents of harassment of transgender voters were reported from Peshawar and Quetta. The accreditation cards issued by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) to 25 transgender observers in Karachi were confiscated by the Sindh Home Department citing security reasons. The study shows that transgender observers faced incidents of harassment and were ridiculed on the basis of their identity by general public and the police.

Coalition for Inclusive Pakistan, in collaboration with experts from the Free and Fair Election Network (FAFEN), deployed 15 trained, non-partisan Long-Term Observers (LTOs) to monitor pre-election processes beginning on June 1 and deployed 375 observers on July 25, 2018 to observe the Election Day. The CIP Election Day Observers – who were duly accredited by the ECP and followed international best practice for domestic election observers – consisted of 125 transgender people, 125 women and 125 PWDs.

CIP is a network of 15 civil society organizations working together to promote the rights of transgender people, women and PWDs. The primary purpose of the CIP initiative was to enable representatives of these traditionally excluded groups to observe, analyze and comment on Pakistan’s elections collectively and from their distinct perspectives for the first time in the country’s history.

This report presents CIP’s preliminary findings with regards to the experiences of transgender people, women and PWDs in their role as election observers and as voters. CIP will issue a separate full report of its specialized election-related findings when all observer checklists have been received and analyzed.

CIP’s preliminary findings regarding General Elections 2018 include the following:

  • One-fifth of EDOs (73 out of 375, or 19.5%) were barred from observing the polling process in at least one polling station on Election-Day.
  • Out of a total of 448 polling stations visited by CIP observers, almost three-quarters of polling stations were physically inaccessible for PWD observers and voters (324 polling stations, or 72.3%).
  • Many PWD observers and voters reportedly found the multi-step postal ballot process cumbersome, confusing and ineffective.

Based on the experiences of its observers, CIP offers preliminary recommendations, which are:

  1. ECP’s training for polling officials and Election-Day security personnel should include clear instructions that any person with an ECP accreditation card must be permitted to observe the polling and vote counting processes in any polling station whatsoever across the country.
  2. ECP’s efforts to ensure the accessibility of all polling stations across the country should be increased to ensure the rights of PWDs to observe the full polling and vote counting processes on Election-Day in any polling station.
  3. ECP’s processes and forms related to postal ballots for PWDs should be entirely redesigned and streamlined to avoid disenfranchising citizens.
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