El Tribunal Supremo ordena a la CE verificar eliminaciones de votantes en la SIR de Bengala Occidental

El Tribunal Supremo, el 10 de marzo de 2026, examinó una demanda que cuestionaba las eliminaciones de votantes durante la Revisión Intensiva Especial (SIR) de las listas electorales de Bengala Occidental e indicó a la Comisión Electoral que mejorara el apoyo logístico para las reclamaciones y objeciones. Esto sigue al reciente impulso de diputados del TMC para un debate parlamentario sobre el asunto y las protestas en curso lideradas por la jefa de Gobierno Mamata Banerjee sobre el proceso, que ha eliminado millones de nombres.

Un banco de jueces compuesto por el juez principal Surya Kant y el juez Joymalya Bagchi atendió las presentaciones de la abogada senior Maneka Guruswamy sobre la eliminación de votantes de las listas de Bengala Occidental durante la SIR, que comenzó en noviembre de 2025 y ha suscitado una amplia controversia de cara a las elecciones a la asamblea legislativa de Bengala Occidental. El tribunal ordenó a la Comisión Electoral (CE) proporcionar apoyo logístico adicional para verificar reclamaciones y objeciones, y garantizar que las listas de votantes actualizadas estén disponibles en todos los distritos. El juez principal del Alto Tribunal de Calcuta informó que se han resuelto más de 10 lakh objeciones, con más de 500 oficiales judiciales de Bengala Occidental—más 200 de Odisha y Jharkhand—actuando como Oficiales de Registro Electoral, trabajando horas extendidas incluidos fines de semana. En medio de las tensiones, se presentó una denuncia policial contra el diputado del Congreso Trinamool Kalyan Banerjee por presuntamente amenazar al Comisario Electoral Principal Gyanesh Kumar durante una protesta. El pleno de la CE está en Calcuta revisando los preparativos, con el CEC Kumar reafirmando el compromiso con elecciones justas pese a protestas que incluyen banderas negras y eslóganes. Esta intervención del Tribunal Supremo llega días después de que diputados del TMC, incluidos Saugata Roy, Nadimul Haque y Saket Gokhale, presentaran notificaciones el 9 de marzo para debates en el Parlamento sobre «privación del derecho de voto», destacando eliminaciones de más de 63 lakh nombres (8,3 % del electorado) y millones pendientes de adjudicación.

Artículos relacionados

Illustration of Election Commission officials deleting 2.7 million names from West Bengal voter list amid TMC-BJP political row and Supreme Court backdrop.
Imagen generada por IA

Election Commission deletes over 27 lakh names from West Bengal voter list

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

The Election Commission of India has deleted over 27 lakh names from West Bengal's voter list following Special Intensive Revision, affecting many who voted in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls. The move has sparked accusations of bias from TMC and defenses from BJP ahead of assembly elections. The Supreme Court recently declined further intervention.

Trinamool Congress MPs have submitted notices in both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha to discuss voter disenfranchisement amid concerns over electoral roll revisions in West Bengal. The move highlights opposition to the Special Intensive Revision process affecting millions of voters. West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has been protesting the exercise through a dharna in Kolkata.

Reportado por IA

India's Supreme Court directed petitioners, including 65 on election duty in West Bengal whose names were deleted from the voter list after Special Intensive Revision (SIR), to approach appellate tribunals. The court refused their plea for immediate voting rights. It also praised the record 92.88% turnout and peaceful polling in the first phase.

Assam's Chief Electoral Officer Anurag Goel stated that the final voter list, published on Tuesday, shows a net decrease of 2.43 lakh voters from the draft, aligning with house-to-house surveys by Booth Level Officers. Over 10 lakh names were deleted amid contentious claims and objections, including bulk filings dismissed as invalid. The process, a modified revision due to the unresolved National Register of Citizens, drew political controversy.

Reportado por IA

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has accused the Election Commission and BJP of a deliberate design to seize control of the state ahead of assembly elections. She claimed over 50 senior officials were summarily removed. Banerjee described it as political interference of the highest order.

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee called for protests on International Women’s Day against recent LPG price hikes and deletions from electoral rolls during her ongoing sit-in in Kolkata. She accused the BJP and Election Commission of targeting Bengali-speaking voters ahead of assembly elections. Banerjee also announced early crediting of funds under a youth employment scheme.

Reportado por IA

India's Supreme Court on Tuesday asked West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee what her legal reaction would be if, by 2030-2031, her party held power at the Centre and an opposing Chief Minister disrupted a central agency raid. The question arose during a hearing on the Enforcement Directorate's petition over a January raid interruption. The bench raised concerns about state interference in central probes.

 

 

 

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar