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Wednesday November 20, 2024

We are not ordering ECP, clarifies Nadra chief

The ECP had earlier taken strong notice of the tone adopted in a letter penned by the NADRA chairman to the electoral body.

By Web Desk
September 17, 2021
NADRA chief Tariq Malik. File photo
NADRA chief Tariq Malik. File photo

WASHINGTON: National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) Chairperson Tariq Malik Friday said the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) is a constitutional body, clarifying that NADRA is not issuing orders for it to follow. 

Responding to media queries at the Pakistan Embassy in Washington, Tariq Malik said the ECP’s response could be the result of a “misunderstanding”.

The ECP had earlier taken strong notice of the tone adopted in a letter penned by the NADRA chairman to the electoral body.

“The Election Commission is a constitutional body and we are not ordering them. They can reprimand us,” Malik said.

He said that this could be a result of a misunderstanding as they prepared a strategy and shared a project plan on the ECP’s directives.

“The ECP gave a go-ahead verbally after which the IT department sought permission. Technical people talk in technical terms and that could be the reason of a misunderstanding between the two state institutions.”

Malik said he would clear up the matter when he returns to the country and added: “We had been cooperating with each other extensively.”

On Thursday, it was reported that the ECP regretted the tone adopted by NADRA Chairperson Tariq Malik in a recent letter penned about the progress on the i-voting system.

Malik, in the letter to the electoral body, asked it to make progress on the proposed system on i-voting.

The ECP, responding to the letter, stated that it is the responsibility of the commission to work on the new electoral system, but the tone adopted in the letter by NADRA is regrettable.

“The letter gave the impression that the ECP is a subordinate of NADRA,” the letter read and added that the language used by the NADRA chairperson made it look like he was giving orders to the ECP.

The ECP wondered why NADRA is looking for a new agreement of Rs2.4 billion for the i-voting project. Why did NADRA abandon the earlier project initiated for i-voting in the country in the middle even after spending Rs65.5 million, the ECP asked.

When contacted, NADRA officials said that the i-voting system earlier used was developed to be piloted by the ECP in 4x by-elections for 38x constituencies in 2018.

It was ECP’s own decision to use it only in 2x by-elections in 2018. During that exercise, the role of NADRA was to provide technical support to ECP, whereas using the i-voting system was the sole discretion of the commission.

The i-voting system is already in place and currently in the custody of ECP. As per contractual obligations, the ECP was supposed to release the long outstanding Rs28.5 million to NADRA.

In a bid to ensure accountability and transparency, NADRA's chairperson had proposed a strategy and plan for a new i-voting system as per guidelines laid down by the Pakistan government, the federal cabinet, President of Pakistan, ECP, parliamentary committee, international auditors and other stakeholders.

Through the new proposed system, NADRA will assist the ECP to develop its independent infrastructure and data centre with dedicated servers, non-NADRA Dependent Network, third party software and human resource capacity building.

The Election Commission will be independent of conducting i-voting for overseas Pakistanis. NADRA's servers and computers will not be used in this system.

NADRA has urged the ECP to progress positively on the proposed system with a view to meeting the project plan timelines as per the expectations of all stakeholders.