Germin: CEC with double standards for diaspora votes

The Central Election Commission at today's meeting has made no decision regarding over 4 thousand and 500 remittances that have arrived after the legal deadline from the exile and for the 38,000 of the 782 envelopes coming from Serbia, which have been delivered physically rather than via mail. Do not make any decisions organisation Germin [...]
Do not make any decisions organisation Germin is calling it a double standard the CEC uses to reject diaspora packages.
At the same time, this organisation is demanding that packages coming from Serbia be investigated.
Liza Gashi from this organisation, for Kosova Prees, says the CEC is comparing the money votes with those coming from Serbia.
I think it's a double standard the CEC has consistently used for refusing diaspora package, relating the whole process with the idea that diaspora packages are the same as Serbia. No, diaspora packages have come individually and are sent. Let's not forget our countrymen made a huge payment, but at the same time they were registered no matter what discouraging process we had before. It means that they're going to have to take it in on the basis of the fact that they've entered a process that they've had first, second when they've sent the vote, the ballot that hasn't come in on time is not due to them, remains in the operational part that there's been obstacles, one of which is bankruptcy of ♫Adria11), and the postal barriers that people haven't reached in times<1>, she said.
She says that during the monitoring process, they have noted that those envelopes that have come late were launched by mail about two weeks before the election date, suggesting that a considerable number of them were sent by September 19, 20th and 21st.
Gashi has reiterated their request that these late-income votes be assessed and counted, as according to her, voter rejection would imply violation of the constitutional right to vote.
As for the envelopes received by Serbia, Lisa Gashi from Germin, says all envelopes have come in the same size, color and inscription, leaving space for doubt that these envelopes have been filled and sent into the CEC address.
She also says there's also a disconsistencies in identifying documents inside these envelopes, encountering documents that identify two people from the front and back of the identification card.
Gashi asks the CEC to investigate all remittances that have come from Serbia, as he says they are not citizens' will votes.
At today's Central Election Commission meeting, no decision could be made about votes reached late by the exiles and those from Serbia, as some members of the CEC demanded that the law be respected in both cases. But there were also members who demanded that the Magyar votes proceed as fair, while those from Serbia are investigated.












