Bengal EC Mandates QR Code Entry for Counting Centres on May 4

The Election Commission has implemented a three-stage identity verification process for entry into counting centres on May 4, with QR code scanning in the final stage. This rule applies to all returning officers, staff, candidates, and election agents. State Chief Electoral Officer Manoj Kumar Aggarwal acknowledged security complaints and will personally inspect counting centres. Security has been further tightened at strong rooms with additional Central forces deployed.

Key Points: Bengal EC: QR Code Entry for Counting Centres on May 4

  • Three-stage identity verification for entry
  • QR code scanning mandatory in final stage
  • Rule applies to officials, candidates, agents
  • Enhanced security with additional Central forces
2 min read

Bengal: EC introduces QR code verification for counting centre entry on May 4​

Election Commission introduces three-stage ID verification with QR code for entry to counting centres in West Bengal Assembly election on May 4.

"There have been complaints about the security of counting centres. - Manoj Kumar Aggarwal"

Kolkata, April 30

The Election Commission has taken several steps to enhance the security of counting centres to prevent unauthorised entry on the day of vote counting for the West Bengal Assembly election on May 4.​

To enter the counting centres on May 4, one must go through a three-stage identity verification process.​

The Election Commission has announced strict measures for the security of electronic voting machines. A notification announced that the identity card will be verified in three stages. In the first and second stages, the identity card will be checked manually. In the third stage, QR code verification will be required.​

In the last stage, the 'green signal' to enter the counting centre will be given only after scanning the QR code.​

The Election Commission has said that this rule will be applicable to all returning officers, assistant returning officers, counting staff, candidates, and election agents.​

District election officers and returning officers have been instructed to take necessary measures to implement this system. The Commission has also instructed the deployment of trained personnel at designated checkpoints to control entry to counting centres.​

State Chief Electoral Officer Manoj Kumar Aggarwal said, "There have been complaints about the security of counting centres." He added that he would visit various counting centres to check it himself; representatives are making inquiries, and, if necessary, security will be increased.​

Incidentally, the strong rooms in each district are under the Commission's strict watch. The election results will be announced on May 4.​

Before that, the state's strong rooms had been wrapped in a heavy security blanket. It has been learnt that the Election Commission has increased security at the strong rooms.​

Electronic voting machines have already reached the strong rooms. Earlier, it was decided that 200 companies of the Central forces would be deployed in the strong rooms. But now, more Central forces are being deployed as part of enhanced security measures.​

The polling percentage in the second phase of elections for 142 Assembly constituencies in West Bengal on April 29 has been recorded at 92.47 per cent till midnight, taking the overall average percentage across the two phases to a record high of 92.85 per cent.​

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Three-stage verification sounds like overkill but I'm not complaining. The 92.85% polling shows people want their voice heard. Hope this tech prevents any "mischief" on counting day. Wishing fair results for Bengal! 🙏
J
James A
Interesting tech implementation for transparency. The QR code system seems robust, but will there be backup checks if scanners fail? Always good to have manual processes too. Kudos to EC for taking security seriously.
V
Varun X
Honestly, EC should have done this earlier. Remember the 2021 Bengal post-poll violence allegations? At least this time they're proactive. But 200 companies of central forces still feel less for a state with such history. Let's hope counting is peaceful.
S
Sarah B
Impressive voter turnout at 92.85%! The QR verification is a logical step given past concerns. But I wonder how smoothly it'll work for everyone, especially elderly candidates and agents. Hope EC has considered accessibility.
A
Aman W
So now every candidate, agent, and staff needs QR code clearance. Better than having "ghost entry." But one question: what if someone loses their QR pass? EC should have a helpline for such issues on counting day. Transparency is key!
M
Michael C
May 4 is going to be crucial for Bengal. The EC's three-layer

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