Registering for Democracy in Yemen
Registering for Democracy in Yemen
Posted by Elisabeth Kvitashvili, Deputy Assistant Administrator, Bureau for Middle East on Thursday, March 20th 2014
Yemen is poised to launch a high-tech Biometric Voter Registry (BVR) system representing a significant step forward in the development of a credible voter registry in that country. During my recent visit to Yemen, I met with the chairman of Yemens Supreme Commission of Elections and the Referendums (SCER) Judge Mohammed Hussein Al-Hakimi to learn first-hand about the opportunities and challenges that exist for Yemens upcoming electoral processes.''
For a country with previous voter registries acknowledged to contain duplicate and under-age voters, as well as ghost voters, the use of the new registry will generate a list of voters that is far more rigorous and less susceptible to fraud. Past voter registries were compiled manually and took upwards of two years to complete.
Funded by international donors, including USAID, the registry is a public sector IT project with software procured in Yemen and ranks among the most sophisticated in the world. I was eager to try it out and so I was fingerprintedboth handson a screen that captured my fingerprints and then photographed with special eye recognition technology....
http://blog.usaid.gov/2014/03/registering-for-democracy-in-yemen/