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Man grabbed for possessing BVD belonging to EC

 Police on Friday arrested a suspect, Yaw Korateng, at Nsawam in the East­ern Region, for being in posses­sion of a Biometric Verification Device (BVD) belonging to the Electoral Commission (EC).

A statement issued by the Gha­na Police Service on its Facebook page on the same day, said the suspect was in police custody and assisting with investigation.

The police did not state the circumstance that led to the arrest, but noted that the EC had been informed of it and invited to verify whether the device belongs to the EC.

“As the investigation into this incident continues, we will like to take this opportunity to thank all stakeholders for their continuous support to ensure security, law, and order during this election period and beyond,” the statement said.

Meanwhile, the EC, in a statement issued by Samuel Tettey, Deputy Chairman of Operations, yesterday, said it took the incident of an unauthorised person pos­sessing a BVD very seriously.

“The commission will like to

 assure the general public and all stakeholders that a stolen BVD cannot jeopardise the integrity of the 2024 elections. We are con­ducting our own internal investiga­tions and will collaborate with the police to bring this matter to its logical conclusion,” the statement said.

The EC clarified that despite the theft and vandalism of these devices, the integrity of the elec­tions remained intact.

It said BVDs, by themselves, cannot compromise the election process as they are essentially off-the-shelf devices that require

 specific technical and security protocols to be operational.

The EC explained that devices not prepared and activated for a particular election cannot affect the outcome.

The statement said voter verifi­cation applications work exclusive­ly with data that has been carefully prepared, audited, encrypted, and signed by their secure system.

This system, it said, was highly restricted, making it impossible for stolen BVDs to access or use this data while BVDs perform an integrity check upon start-up.

The EC ensured the security of BVDs by implementing strict protocols while the BVDs would not function if their data was altered, and activation codes were restricted to authorised officials.

The statement said voter data on BVDs must match the updat­ed Voter Register for each polling station, adding that political party agents track and document BVD serial numbers to maintain trans­parency and accountability.

The EC called upon the police to thoroughly investigate the recent case of a BVD found in unauthorised possession, and expressed the readiness of its of­ficials to cooperate fully with the police investigations to resolve the issue

BY TIMES REPORTER

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