Government faces probe over vote fraud
Last updated at 11:52am on 17.10.06
The Government is facing a human rights inquiry into alleged electoral fraud in the UK.
The investigation has been launched by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, the Strasbourg-based human rights watchdog.
A Resolution signed by 18 Assembly members - national politicians from the Council's 46 member countries - cites "a growing body of evidence that widespread absent vote fraud is taking place in the United Kingdom".
The UK Electoral Commission warned of possible abuses and urged tighter security after postal and proxy voting on demand was introduced in 2001.
And in 2005 a judge hearing a case of about alleged postal voting fiddles in Birmingham said the evidence of electoral fraud "would disgrace a banana republic".
Now the system is under the human rights spotlight thanks to a motion for a Resolution whose signatories include Tory MPs David Wilshire, Christopher Chope, Christopher Fraser, Humfrey Malins and Nigel Evans, Liberal Democrat Nick Harvey and Tory peers Gloria Hooper and Jill Knight. Other signatories include four Russian and two Polish MPs.
The move was backed yesterday by the Assembly's Monitoring Committee, which appointed a former German Justice Minister and a Polish Senator to look into allegations of irregularities involving postal and absentee votes in Birmingham, Blackburn, Coventry and London.
The pair will now visit London - and other parts of the UK if necessary - before reporting back to the Committee on their findings, a statement said today.
Their job will be "to assess whether or not electoral fraud in the UK merits the opening of the Assembly's monitoring procedure".
The Human Rights Convention, which the Council of Europe upholds, obliges its 46 member states to "hold free elections ... which will ensure the free expression of the opinion of the people in the choice of the legislature".
Reader views (2)
Postal voting fraud in the UK is as bad as the so called third world countries. Labour/Blair has openly allowed this to happen.
- Demin Shah, London
About bloody time... and for once it's the EC doing something good.
It's high time we went back to the time-proven system where postal votes were obtainable only in special circumstances and only for one election at a time(excepting the permanently disabled). So what if lots of people can't be bothered to walk half a mile to a polling station? If they can't be bothered, they have no right to be unhappy with any result determined by those who do bother.
- Nigel, London
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