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News > Latin America

Ecuador Promotes Program to Ensure Disabled Can Vote

  • Ecuadoreans will elect their new president on Feb.19.

    Ecuadoreans will elect their new president on Feb.19. | Photo: Health Ministry of Ecuador

Published 2 February 2017
Opinion

Ahead of the presidential elections, Ecuador is rolling out a plan to make it easier for people with disabilities to vote.

For the upcoming presidential elections in Ecuador people with a disability will have preferential or home-assisted voting thanks to a plan promoted by the current leftist government of Rafael Correa.

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Ecuadoreans will elect their new president on Feb.19, and one of the candidates is disabled. Lenin Moreno served as Correa's vice president from 2007 to 2013 and has been in a wheelchair since being shot in 1998. He has since served as special envoy on disability and accessibility at the United Nations.

For the past 10 years, since the government of Rafael Correa took office, the government has focused on ensuring people with disabilities are treated with respect and dignity through several foundations and initiatives across the country.

The Electoral Council, the Disability Council and the Federation of Taxi Drivers began this year's campaign called, "They Have a Right to Vote,” which will include voting from home, voting center preference and assisted voting in the case of anyone who needs a relative or spouse to help with the voting process.

During the elections, more than a 1,000 electoral observers will be dedicated to assuring that the 345,467 people with a disability registered to vote can do so.

Some 887 people will vote from their homes on Feb. 17, two days before the election, across the 24 provinces in the country. Their votes will be sealed and counted on Feb. 19.

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According to Mauricio Tayupanta from the Electoral Council, this initiative will lower the absent rates of people with a disability, which during the 2014 elections reached a historical 75 percent, even though their vote is not mandatory as it is for the general population.

"This program has allowed Ecuador to be a pioneer and for other countries and electoral bodies such as the Dominican Republic and Paraguay to request our assistance," said Tayupanta.

The taxi federation will give free rides from homes to voting centers, and then back to their homes, as part of the program "Solidarity Taxi" and 30,000 policemen will ensure the safe and easy voting process of those with a disability.

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