Workshop highlights voter concerns over special intensive revision

A workshop in Kalaburagi criticized the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) process for disenfranchising millions of voters, making them feel like outsiders in their own country. Activists claimed it targets the poor, Dalits, and minorities. However, Election Commission data links actual deletions to deceased, migrated, or duplicate registrations.

On February 1, a one-day workshop on Special Intensive Revision (SIR) was organized by Pragatipara Sanghatanegala Okkuta and Kalyana Karnataka Horata Samiti in Kalaburagi city. It focused on citizenship, voter lists, and the problems faced by poor and marginalized communities due to the SIR exercise.

Progressive thinker Shivasundar described the consequences of recent SIR-related exclusions. He said, “Removing deceased names and adding those who have turned 18 is the Election Commission’s job. No one opposes that, but denying citizens their official records under the SIR framework is a different matter. Without these documents, millions are being considered outsiders in their own country.” He cited Bihar, where 65 lakh people, including 18 lakh Muslims, have been excluded from the SIR list. Across 13 states, an estimated 6 crore people face similar scrutiny. Those born between 1987 and 2004 are required to submit documents proving not only their own birth but also that of their parents in India.

Activist K. Prakash explained that preparing the voter list is the Election Commission's job, but the current SIR verification goes beyond this. He said, “Being on the voter list has always been considered proof of being an Indian citizen. Now, even people who have voter identity cards are being asked for extra documents. Poor and marginalized communities are affected the most because they often do not have these papers.”

The workshop concluded with an interactive session with students. Presiding Basavaraj Deshmukh reminded attendees that every vote matters in a democracy and encouraged more such awareness programs.

At another event organized by the Committee for Protection of Constitution at Kannada Bhavana in Kalaburagi, Shivasundar claimed that the SIR exercise targets women, tribal communities, minorities, Dalits, and economically weaker sections. He said, “The SIR is not just a revision of electoral rolls, but a systematic war against minorities, tribal communities, Dalits, women and other marginalized sections of society.” He alleged political motives, claiming the Union Government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi is using constitutional bodies like the Election Commission to serve electoral interests.

However, according to a Hindustan Times analysis, the SIR has resulted in a net deletion of 35.4 million voters (8.1%) in 12 states and Union territories where it has been completed. In Bihar, 4.8 million (6%) were deleted, but the number of voters did not fall in the 2025 assembly elections due to increased turnout. Deletions appear linked to deceased individuals, migrations, or duplicate registrations. Higher deletions in urban districts may be tied to migration patterns. There is a discrepancy in Bihar figures, with activists citing 65 lakh exclusions versus official data of 4.8 million, highlighting differences between claims and reported numbers.

Shivasundar referenced exclusions of 74 lakh voters in Tamil Nadu and nearly three crore in Uttar Pradesh, alleging most were Muslims or opponents of the ruling BJP. He called for collective resistance from civil society, students, youth, and progressive groups.

Artikel Terkait

Election Commission officials pruning electoral rolls in SIR phase two, deleting 5.4 crore voters across 12 states with Uttar Pradesh leading.
Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI

Election Commission's SIR phase two trims 5.4 crore voters from 12 states and UTs

Dilaporkan oleh AI Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI

The Election Commission's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) second phase has reduced voters by about 5.4 crore in 12 states and Union Territories. Uttar Pradesh saw 2.05 crore names deleted with the release of its final electoral roll. The process began on October 27, 2025.

Uttar Pradesh minister Ravindra Jaiswal has questioned the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of the electoral roll in his Varanasi North constituency, where names of 9,200 voters were found registered at multiple polling booths. He labeled it as 'vote jihad' and demanded an inquiry from the district magistrate. Opposition parties have already been pointing to flaws in the SIR process.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

A Maharashtra Congress delegation met Chief Electoral Officer S Chockalingam on Thursday and submitted a memorandum demanding a fair and transparent Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls. State Congress president Harshwardhan Sapkal alleged deliberate exclusion of voters from specific castes and religions along with irregularities.

The Gujarat high court has directed the state election commission to include the name of Ahmedabad resident J B Patel in the electoral list to be published on April 10. Patel’s name was deleted during the special intensive revision (SIR) of the assembly electoral rolls. The order comes ahead of the Ahmedabad municipal corporation polls on April 26.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

The Election Commission of India has published the electoral rolls for West Bengal on February 28, including 7.08 crore names, with 60 lakh under adjudication due to logical discrepancies. This follows the Special Intensive Revision process and Supreme Court directives. Voters can check their status online or offline to see if their name is verified, under review, or deleted.

The Ministry of Education's recent audit report has faced questions after over 500,000 students were left unverified due to reliance on digital records instead of physical headcounts. The nationwide verification exercise aimed to clean up enrolment data and streamline capitation funding. However, significant discrepancies between the National Education Management Information System (NEMIS) and confirmed figures have raised concerns about students attending classes without complete registration.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

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.

 

 

 

Situs web ini menggunakan cookie

Kami menggunakan cookie untuk analisis guna meningkatkan situs kami. Baca kebijakan privasi kami untuk informasi lebih lanjut.
Tolak