IRR challenges IEC report on free and fair elections
The Institute of Race Relations (IRR) has written to the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) to challenge the findings of its report on whether the municipal election scheduled for October would be free and fair, to query its procedural integrity, and to urge that it executes its constitutional duty to administer free and fair elections before municipal government dissolves nationwide.
Earlier this week the IEC published a report on whether the scheduled elections could be free and fair. According to this report, it will not be “reasonably possible” to hold elections in a “free and fair” manner as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic and concomitant restrictions. The report recommends that the municipal elections be postponed to February next year. This report is procedurally irregular, irrational and reckless, and must be dismissed.
The position of the IRR is that it would be an error to postpone the elections – there is no guarantee that the country will be in a better position in February 2022 with regard to Covid-19 than it will be in October 2021.
Quite the opposite: scientific evidence presented by the IEC shows that February 2022 is likely to be more dangerous than October 2021, viz Covid-19, because of “Covid-19 fatigue”, the likelihood of an October trough and February 4th wave, and the likelihood of mutations that reduce vaccine effectiveness, and no holistic assessment in the IEC report to the contrary. Furthermore, the evidence from scientists to the IEC shows that elections do not increase the rate of Covid-19 infections, and no scientific evidence was published by the IEC to the contrary.
In our letter to the IEC, we challenge the Moseneke report on the following grounds: