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ELECTORAL RULES OF OEBS
Central Electoral Committee announced the
rules for general elections on Kosovo on 2nd
August.
According to the rules, a polling place will
be an area 100 metres far from the entrance into
the building where a polling place is located.
Only voters will be allowed to be present at the
polling place, as well as the members of the
committee of the polling place, the
international supervisor of the polling place
and the staff of the polling centre. The
officials of UNMIK and OEBS, members of Central
electoral committee, members of the local
electoral committee, accredited monitors and
officially accredited representatives of the
media will also be allowed to participate.
Political parties, citizens' initiatives,
coalitions and candidates have to remove all the
material of the electoral campaign which can be
found 100 metres from the polling place or
centre, not later than 24 hours prior to the
beginning of the voting.
The voting procedure
Polling places will be opened from 7 am to 7
pm. The voters who at the time of closing happen
to be at the polling place will be allowed to
vote. The voters who come after 7 pm will not be
allowed to vote. According to the rules, Central
electoral committee can, in consultation with
the Director of the executive organs of the
elections from OEBS, change the time of opening
or closing of the certain polling places if it
is of the interest in the very electoral
procedure.
A poling place can't have more than 750
voters, it mustn't be located in a religious
object, in the building owned by a political
subject, the building which has been used as a
place for torture and abuse, or on the premises
where alcohol is served and consumed.
Every voter has to vote in person. The
secrecy of voting will be ensured by setting the
screens for voting. Nobody would be able to
hinder a voter at the polling place who is
filling his ballot paper, nor to try to get any
information related to a political party, a
coalition, a citizens' initiative or an
independent candidate.
In order to avoid fraud, every voter will be
examined with a special lamp before entering the
polling place in order to check if he has a
stain from invisible ink. The voter who has a
stain from the invisible ink will not be allowed
to enter the polling place. The photographs of
all voters will be printed beside their names on
the voting register unless the Director of the
executive organs of the elections from OEBS made
a different decision.
The voters' identity can be confirmed: -by
a voter's photograph beside his name on the
final voting register -by showing UNMIK
identity card or -by showing some other
document containing the voter's photograph
If a member of the committee cannot determine
the identity of the voter with any of the
anticipated methods, then he should send him to
the help stand where the staff will decide
whether the voter is registered in the voting
list. If it is determined that the voter can't
be found in the voting register, the staff of
the help stand will ask the voter to come back
with an acceptable identification document.
The voter who is not registered in the voting
list will still be able to vote with an
acceptable identification document (with a
photograph), but his ballot paper will be put
aside and packed in a separate envelope. The
basic data of that voter will be included in the
conditional register which will be formed during
the election day in the voting register.
Conditional ballot papers will be subjected to a
special procedure and accepted as valid if "the
conditional voter" is found in the final voting
register.
After the voter has been duly identified and
after signing in the voting register, the
detector for the invisible ink will be applied
on him (a special lamp with ultraviolet light),
in order to prevent one voter from voting
several times. A stain from ink will be placed
on a finger of every voter before he/she is
given his/her ballot paper. The voter who
doesn't allow to take a stain from ink on his
finger won't be allowed to vote. The invisible
ink will be put on the ball of the forefinger of
the voter's right hand. If the voter doesn't
have a forefinger, the ink will be placed on the
thumb, or on the third, fourth or fifth finger.
If the voter doesn't have the right hand, the
same order will be used on the left hand. If the
voter doesn't have hands at all, the request
concerning the ink will be abolished. The voter
will be required to hold his hand in the air
until the ink dries up.
After the voter gets the invisible ink, a
member of the electoral committee will certify
the back of the ballot paper with an official
seal and give the ballot paper to the voter.
Invalid ballot papers
If the voter makes his ballot paper invalid,
he can obtain a new ballot paper from the
committee, if he first returns the invalid one.
After that a member of the commission will
examine the word "invalid" on the returned
invalid ballot paper and place it in an envelope
"an invalid ballot paper" and then he will give
the voter a valid ballot paper.
Voting of persons in special
circumstances
Persons who have a right to vote, but are at
the places where their freedom of movement is
limited (prisons, hospitals and the similar
institutions) or who are in any other way
prevented from voting due to fear or physical
incapacity and since their coming to the polling
place is impossible, they can vote before the
election day in accordance with the procedure of
the Director of the executive organs of
elections from OEBS. The same rule goes for the
employees such as OEBS's election clerks or in
security and health services who are prevented
from coming to the polling place or centre.
Voting outside of Kosovo
The ballot papers sent by mail and received
till midnight before the election day in Kosovo
will be counted. The ballot papers sent by mail
after the deadline will not be counted. In order
to be counted, the ballot paper sent by mail has
to be sent by a person who has a right to vote,
it needs to be in a sealed envelope in order to
ensure the secrecy of voting, it needs to be
sent together with the confirmation about the
voter's registration and with a photocopy of the
acceptable document when it is required by
administrative procedures.
OEBS's International supervisor of the
polling place
In every polling place or in the centre for
counting of votes there will be at least one
OEBS's international supervisor who will assume
complete responsibility for the voting procedure
in the polling place or in the polling centre,
who will take care of the application of
electoral rules of Central electoral committee
and administrative procedures of OEBS and he
will monitor the process in order to prevent any
irregularities. That person will keep a record
about any important events in a separate book on
the voting procedure in the polling station.
Safety at the polling place
Carrying weapons will not be allowed at the
polling place, unless the international
supervisor of OEBS or the Chairman of the
committee of the polling place asks the
security/police for help.
OEBS, the International supervisor of OEBS or
Central electoral committee can stop the voting
process at the polling place when a serious
violation of electoral rules or administrative
procedures occurs.
Complaints
Complaints about the voting procedure has to
be handed over to the electoral sub-committee
for complaints within 24 hours after the
complainant becomes familiar with the alleged
violation of electoral rules or administrative
procedures, but in no way later than 48 hours
after the occurrence of the alleged
violation.
Every complain has to be fully and finally
solved within five days after it is received by
the electoral subcommittee for complaints and
appeals.
Counting of votes
The votes will be counted at the polling
places in Kosovo right after the voting takes
place. According to the rules of the Central
electoral committee, all other ballot papers
will be counted in the Centre for counting and
results, which was founded by the Director of
the executive organs of the elections from OEBS
in Kosovo.
According to the rules, only in the
exceptional cases, such as the concern for the
safety of voters or the safety of the ballot
papers, the Director of the executive organs of
the elections from OEBS can, with the consent of
the Central electoral committee, order that the
votes from the polling place should be counted
in the Centre for counting and results.
The counting of the paper ballots in the
Centre for counting will not begin before 7 pm,
when the polling places close.
Tomorrow the elections in Kosovo
Belgrade, November 16th - The elections will
be held in Kosovo where more than 1.25 million
people with the right to vote will be able to
elect 120 deputies in the future Kosovo
Assembly. The voters will be able to vote at
1.668 polling places in Kosovo, as well as at
177 places in Serbia and at 19 places in
Montenegro. 178.000 Serbs have the right to
vote, and more than 100.000 of them will be
allowed to vote at the polling places in Serbia
and Montenegro. Polling places will be opened
from 7 am to 8 pm. There are 26 parties,
coalitions and independent candidates at the
elections, including wide Serbian coalition
"Return". There will be 19 parties, two
coalitions, two citizens' initiatives and three
independent candidates. The electoral silence
began at midnight and it will last till the
polling places close, that is, till 8 pm on
Saturday, November 17th. The elections are
organized by OEBS, and they will be monitored by
the delegation of European Council, two Albanian
non-governmental organizations, as well as the
Belgrade organization CeSID and the Montenegrin
Centre for election monitoring. More than 30.000
soldiers of KFOR will take care of the security
in Kosovo during the elections, as well as about
8.000 policemen of UNMIK and Kosovo police.
CeSID monitors the elections in
Kosovo
Belgrade, November 16th - About 900 monitors
of the Centre for free elections and democracy
(CeSID) will monitor the voting procedure at 177
polling places in Serbia, 150 in Kosovo (the
polling places where Serbs make the majority of
the population), whereas the monitoring of the
voting procedure will be organized at 19 polling
places in Montenegro in cooperation with the
non-governmental organization from Podgorica -
Centre for election monitoring. Beside the
voting procedure at those polling places,
CeSID's active members will also monitor the
counting of votes in, for this occasion
organized, Centre for counting of votes in
Obilic, near Pristina. CeSID accredited 73
monitors in Obilic for the counting of votes.
CeSID won't be monitoring the work of the
Central electoral committee and the work of the
help services (centres for data entry and data
processing), because CeSID didn't obtain
accreditations for that part of the procedure
from OEBS, the organizer of the Kosovo
elections. CeSID's active members will be
monitoring the elections in the municipalities
of Strpce, Kosovska Vitina, Prizren and
Gnjilane, considering the fact that the mission
of OEBS in Kosovo corrected its omission,
discovering in the meantime the accreditations
assigned to CeSID's monitors in those
municipalities. |