9:57
pm | Sunday, June 23rd, 2013
SAN FERNANDO, Romblon—A certain
Beregaldo R. Romero has been dead for over a year now. Yet he was able to cast
his vote and even affix his supposed thumbmark in last May’s elections,
according to a copy of the Commission on Elections (Comelec) voters’ list.
In a 58-page election protest, Mayor
Dindo Rios raised the case of Romero as among other election “irregularities”
as grounds for the “revision and reappreciation of the ballots” cast for
mayoral candidates here on May 13.
“This election protest is anchored
on massive fraud and election irregularities, which vitiated the conduct of the
election… and affected the legality thereof,” read a copy of Rios’ protest
filed at the Regional Trial Court (RTC) Branch 81 in Romblon, Romblon, on May
23.
Rios, a member of the Liberal Party,
lost his reelection bid to Salem Tansingco of the Nacionalista Party by a
margin of 284 votes.
Attached to the protest was the
sworn statement of Sammy Boy R. Bañares II, a grandson of the late Romero, who
was also a poll watcher of Rios and a resident of Barangay Mabulo here.
In his statement written in
Filipino, Bañares said he was surprised when his grandfather’s name was called
out at precinct number 22, here, on Election Day.
“So I went to check the voters’
master list and saw that someone had voted for my grandfather. There was also a
thumbmark affixed beside my grandfather’s name,” Bañares said.
Romero died in January 2012,
according to his grandson.
In a phone interview on Sunday,
Tansingco, quoting the municipal board of election inspectors (BEI), said
Romero’s was a case of an “honest mistake” by the election officers.
He said a certain Bernaldo Romero,
also from the village, by mistake had placed his thumbprint next to the dead
man’s name instead of his.
Tansingco said the names of both
Romeros could be on the same page of the voters’ list that was arranged in an
alphabetical order.
Under the Voter’s Registration Act
of 1996, the local civil registrar submits to the election officer a monthly
certified list of persons, 18 years old and above, who had died. It is then the
election officer’s duty to strike out the names of the deceased from the
voters’ list of the town or city under his jurisdiction.
“But the problem is when, for
instance, the person dies elsewhere and the death certificate is processed
somewhere else,” lawyer Val Mendoza, Romlon election supervisor, said when
asked to comment on the matter.
Mendoza said Romero’s death
certificate could be proof to the allegation. But should the court find that
someone else did vote in his place, “it would be very difficult then to trace
to whom the vote went” and therefore from whom it would be stricken out, he
said.
Tansingco garnered 5,637 votes while
Rios got 5,353. Independent candidate Ricardo Aligo Jr. got 247 votes.
According to Comelec records, the total number of actual votes was 11,694.
Aside from Romero’s vote, Rios also
raised concern over the precinct count optical scan machines that malfunctioned
during the election and instances when the BEI members “inserted their hands
and even used sticks in fixing the machines.”
The RTC on June 13 ordered the board
of canvassers to turn over the San Fernando ballots to Romblon town in time for
the prehearing conference on the case set for today.
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