Thursday, May 19, 2011 | MANILA, PHILIPPINES
Strategic Perspective -- by René B. Azurin
Forcing through
In basketball, the offense used to be descriptively called "forcing through." This was a foul on the charging player. No referee, however, is expected to call a foul on the six Comelec commissioners who’ve rammed through a lone blocker (Commissioner Gus Lagman) to satisfy an ardent desire to buy Smartmatic’s PCOS machines for the ARMM elections in August. They doubtless intend to get away with sweeping aside prescribed procedures and the warnings of IT experts on the serious flaws of the Smartmatic system.The  referee here should be the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee.  According to the Poll Automation Law (R.A. 9369), it is the JCOC that  should finally decide whether "[a] particular AES [automated election  system] technology is already appropriate and should be utilized fully  for subsequent election [sic]." R.A. 9369 also provides that it  is the JCOC that should determine whether "[a] particular AES technology  should no longer be utilized for being obsolete, inapplicable,  inaccurate or with a defect which cannot be remedied." The 6-to-1 vote  in the en banc session of the Commission on  Elections probably means that the six charging commissioners -- lawyers  all -- believe that they can just ignore the JCOC in this matter and  dispense with such minor legal details.
The  six commissioners also presumably feel more knowledgeable about  information technology issues than the top IT experts in the country  (including the dissenting Mr. Lagman). Ateneo computer science professor  Dr. Pablo Manalastas, for example, said that he "found the  Smartmatic-supplied PCOS technology... full of bugs and errors... (and)  not fit for use in any election." Clearly perplexed, he continued, "Yet  it defies human logic and common sense that despite public concerns  about the AES -- including from the country’s key IT organizations and  academics -- the Comelec is hell-bent on re-using the discredited  Smartmatic PCOS in the  coming elections."
The  Comelec’s behavior actually has IT industry practitioners and computer  science experts in an uproar. In a letter last month to the Senate  Committee on Local Governments, Dr. Manalastas, De La Salle Dean of  Computer Science Dr. Rachel Roxas, Philippine Computer Society  Foundation President Nelson Celis, Philippine Computer Emergency  Response Team President Angel Averia, Philippine Computer Society’s  Edmundo Casiño, and others, unequivocally said that "we are against the  use of the defective PCOS machines/AES used in the May 2010 elections."
AES  Watch is a nonpartisan, independent coalition of citizens’ groups that  closely monitored the conduct  of the May 2010 elections. This election watchdog includes some 40  organizations like Namfrel, CBCP-Nassa, the National Council of Churches  of the Philippines, Transparency International-Philippines, the Center  for People Empowerment in Governance, the UP Alumni Association, the  Philippine Computer Society Foundation, the Computing Society of the  Philippines, the Computer Professionals Union, the Philippine Computer  Emergency Response Team, CAUCUS-Philippine Computer Society, and the  deans and faculty of the computer science departments of UP, De La  Salle, and Ateneo. In a released formal statement, AES Watch said that  "the Smartmatic-provided PCOS technology is non-transparent, dismally  lacks security safeguards, is non-auditable, and is full of  inaccuracies." Of the conduct of the May 2010 elections, AES Watch  categorically stated that "the election technology was critically  defective not only in terms of software and infrastructures but also in  election management and legal implementation."
Notably,  the Comelec’s own technical advisory council, chaired (then) by Mr.  Anthony Roxas-Chua, recommended (in a post-election report dated June  20, 2010) that Comelec not lease or buy the Smartmatic PCOS machines for  future elections.
In  ignoring all these independent experts and observers, one surely has to  be impressed by the confidence exhibited by the six Comelec  commissioners in their own IT knowledge and abilities.
For  the ARMM elections, reliable sources report that Comelec  is preparing to negotiate a contract amounting to some P 1.95 billion.  That amount is broken down as follows: hardware (PCOS machines), P130.9  million; ballot boxes, P17.0 million; election consumables, P50.3  million; technology related services, P756.0 million, and non-technology  related services, P1,000.0 million. In a letter to the Senate’s Joint  Congressional Oversight Committee for Elections, IT industry guru Manuel  Alcuaz Jr. declared, "The proposed contract is definitely bloated."
Mr.  Alcuaz noted that "ARMM’s 3,379 PCOS precincts represent only 4.42% of  the national total of 76,347 PCOS precincts." He pointed out that 4.42%  of the amount of P1,900 million spent for technology services in the May  2010 elections is only P83.9 million, not P756.0 million. Ah, that’s an  overprice of 800%! Mr. Alcuaz  also observed that, in the 2010 elections, Comelec rented the 82,200  PCOS machines for P30,600 per machine and, now, proposes to buy 4,000  machines for the same amount per machine. He then pointed to Comelec’s  oft-repeated justification for buying the Smartmatic machines as the  Smartmatic contract’s stipulation that Comelec had the right to buy the  machines at only 30% of their rental price. That being so, the correct  price for the machines is P9,185 each, which translates to a total of  P36 million for 4,000 machines, not P130.9 million. The overprice here  is around 300%! Mr. Alcuaz also wondered what a whopping P1000.0 million  of non-technology-related services could include and why this should be  negotiated with a technology contractor like Smartmatic.
The incentives for forcing through this new deal with  Smartmatic are becoming clear.
For  a European Union-funded project, the UP-based research group Center for  People Empowerment in Governance studied the automation of the 2010  elections from its beginnings (in 2008). CenPEG executive director Evita  Jimenez and policy studies director Bobby Tuazon said in a recent press  conference, "As in the first automated elections of May 10, 2010, the  Comelec, now headed by former election lawyer Sixto Brillantes, is again  short-cutting the procedure and is making decisions under a shroud of  secrecy."
Neither  Comelec nor the Venezuelan company Smartmatic and its Philippine  partner TIM have been able to rebut the criticisms of groups like  AES Watch and CenPEG.
In  a joint statement, AES Watch and CenPEG stated, "There should be no  illusion that modern technology will guarantee a free election. Who  controls the machine controls the votes. There are more daunting tasks  that should be addressed to make our elections democratic and these  include a thorough reform of the Comelec to make it a credible and  independent election manager. The cheating machineries of traditional  political parties and oligarchs should be effectively checked. Until  these issues are effectively answered, the people’s right to equalize  the election playing field and their freedom to choose a government that  truly represents their sovereign voice will remain on paper only."
Very well said.
 
