Malawi's election commission rejected opposition parties who wanted their computer experts to check voting systems. The country needs neutral technology auditors to solve growing trust problems between government and opposition groups. Independent auditors would examine voting machines and computer programs without taking sides. Their reports could find weak spots and fix security holes before elections happen.
Neutral experts would check voter lists and how results travel from polling stations to headquarters. They would study computer records to catch any cheating or unauthorized access. Opposition parties and citizens would trust elections more after independent reviews. Auditors would suggest ways to make voting safer and more transparent for everyone.
Public reports from neutral auditors would help voters understand election security. Local computer workers could learn new skills from international experts during the review process. Independent auditors might help election officials and opposition leaders talk through their differences. Fair and open elections depend on technology systems that all parties can trust completely.
Neutral experts would check voter lists and how results travel from polling stations to headquarters. They would study computer records to catch any cheating or unauthorized access. Opposition parties and citizens would trust elections more after independent reviews. Auditors would suggest ways to make voting safer and more transparent for everyone.
Public reports from neutral auditors would help voters understand election security. Local computer workers could learn new skills from international experts during the review process. Independent auditors might help election officials and opposition leaders talk through their differences. Fair and open elections depend on technology systems that all parties can trust completely.