1. Built with Android
OS: The Card Reader uses a highly secure cryptographic technology
that is used commonly in devices that need to perform secure transactions, such
as paying terminals. It has ultra-low power consumption, with a single core
frequency of 1.2GHz and an Android 4.2.2. Operating System. The INEC staff
operating the Card Reader will scan the PVC of each voter to verify its
genuiness before allowing the voter to get accredited. It takes an average of
10 to 20 seconds to authenticate a voter.
2. Longer Battery Life: The Card reader has a 3200mAh battery, which can lasts for about 12 hours in continual usage when fully charged. The device hibernates when not in use to save and lengthen the battery life.
3. Is it possible to accredit all voters who turn out within the stipulated hours for accreditation using the Card Reader?: The accreditation of a voter, using the Card Reader, is estimated to last an average of 10 to 20 seconds per voter. Even if we double this time to 20 to 45 seconds for planning purposes, and working on the basis of a maximum of 750 voters per voting point, and using a generous projection of 70% voter turnout (the average being 54% from past elections), which equates to 525 voters, the card reader will need 6.5hours to process all the voters. This is well within the operating time for the elections as well as the battery life of the Card reader.
4.
How is the Card Reader programmed?:
To prevent fraudulent use, the Card Rader is configured to work only on
Election Days. In addition, the device is configured to specific polling units
and cannot be used elsewhere without requiring reconfiguration by authorised
INEC personnel.
·
The Card Reader reads the embedded chip on the
PVC, not the barcode, and it shares a secret code with the PVC; thus it is
impossible to falsify the cards.
· The Card Reader authenticates the identity of the voter by cross-matching his/her fingerprints with that stored on the embedded chip. No person can vote using another person’s PVC.
· The Card reader keeps a tally of all cards read, comprising the details of all voters verified as well as those not verified, and transmits the collected information to a central INEC server via GSM data service.
·
Information transmitted to the server will
enable INEC to audit results from polling units, as well as do a range of
statistical analysis of the demographics of voting.
6.
Who operates the Card Reader at the
Polling Unit?: An Assistant Presiding Officer (APO) at the polling
unit has the responsibility to operate the Card Reader. Poll officials that
will operate the Card Readers have received extensive hands-on training and are
well equipped to handle the task. The Commission has also painstakingly
outlined the operational procedures in its ‘Approved Guidelines and Regulations
for the Conduct of 2015 General Elections’.
7.
Tested and Trusted: The
Card Reader units have been broadly subjected to simulation Quality Assurance,
Integrity and Functionality tests and INEC has full confidence in their
performance for election purposes. The device has also been subjected to
Performance and Conformance Test, both locally and in Texas, United States,
laboratories by the Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) Research Centre and
found to be of the highest quality grade. Besides all these, and with
additional time resulting from the rescheduling of the 2015 general elections,
the Commission has directed that Stress Test be conducted on the Card Reader
device in mock election scenarios – two states in each of the six geo-political
zones – ahead of the new election dates.
8.
How has the INEC’s Card Reader
addressed the problems experienced in other countries in the sub-region?:
The challenge with a few of the Card Reader devices in Ghana, for instance,
during the country’s 2012 general elections was the battery power, apparently
because the affected devices were not fully charged. It was in learning from
this experience that INEC designed the Card Readers to be used in the 2015
elections with 12-hour battery life in active usage, and also procured more
than 35,000 units of back-up batteries. The imperative of adequate charging of
the Card Readers is underscored during the trainings of election personnel.
·
The supposed technology failures during Kenya’s
general elections in 2013 had nothing to do with card readers, as the country
used computer poll books for accreditation. The challenge was rather with the
electronic system used in transmitting results, and not card readers.
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