Bengal Voter List Purge: 91 Lakh Names Deleted as Judicial Process Ends

The judicial adjudication process for West Bengal's voters has concluded, with the Election Commission estimating approximately 91 lakh names deleted from the electoral rolls. The final figure may increase slightly as e-signatures are completed for a small remaining batch of cases. Murshidabad district recorded the highest number of deletions at over 4.55 lakh names. Voters deemed "excludable" can appeal the decision at one of 19 specially established Appellate Tribunals.

Key Points: 91 Lakh Voters Deleted in Bengal After Judicial Adjudication

  • ~91 lakh voters deleted
  • Judicial adjudication process concluded
  • Murshidabad district highest deletions
  • Voters can appeal at Appellate Tribunals
3 min read

Bengal SIR: 91 lakh names likely to be deleted as judicial adjudication process concludes

West Bengal's voter list sees ~91 lakh deletions as judicial adjudication concludes ahead of Assembly polls. Details on the process and district-wise figures.

"the total number of deleted voters in West Bengal in the entire SIR exercise has increased to 90,83,345 - CEO Office Officer"

Kolkata, April 7

With the judicial adjudication process for voters in West Bengal concluding after midnight on Monday, the Election Commission of India has estimated that the total number of deleted voters in West Bengal has risen to approximately 91 lakh.

However, the number might increase nominally in due course after the ECI arrives at the final figure, with the process of putting e-signatures by the judicial officers completed for a small percentage of the total number of cases that were referred for judicial adjudication.

As per the figures provided by the office of the Chief Electoral Officer (CEO), West Bengal, of the total number of 60,06,675 cases referred for judicial adjudication, the process has been finalised for 59,84,512 cases, with e-signatures of the judicial officers put on them.

Again, out of the figure of 59,84,512, the number of voters who have been deemed "excludable" and hence "deleted" by the judicial officers stands at 27,16,393, which means that the total number of deleted voters in West Bengal currently stands at 90,83,345.

Before the notification of the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) was issued for West Bengal in November last year, the total number of voters in the state stood at 7,66,37,529. In the draft voters' list published in December last year, a total of 58,20,899 names were deleted. In the final voters' list published on February 28, the deletion figure rose to 63,66,952.

"Now, with 27,16,393 cases found excludable by the judicial officers, the total number of deleted voters in West Bengal in the entire SIR exercise has increased to 90,83,345. The process of putting e-signatures of the judicial officers is yet to be completed for 22,163 cases. Once that is completed, some more names might be added to the current deletion figure," explained an officer from the CEO's office.

However, the voters whose names have been found "excludable" in the judicial adjudication process will have an opportunity to move for remission at any one of the 19 Appellate Tribunals set up for that purpose.

As per figures available from the CEO's office, the maximum number of cases found "excludable" during the judicial adjudication exercise had been from the minority-dominated Murshidabad district. The total number of deleted names from Murshidabad stands at 4,55,137, followed by North 24 Parganas at 3,25,666, and another minority-dominated district of Malda at 2,39,375.

The two-phase Assembly polls in West Bengal will be on April 23 and April 29. In the first phase, voting will be held for 152 Assembly constituencies, and in the second phase, the remaining 142 seats will have polling. The results will be declared on May 4.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Shreya B
While cleaning the list is important, deleting so many names so close to elections is worrying. Many genuine voters might be affected. The focus should be on inclusion, not just deletion. The appellate tribunals better be efficient!
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Arjun K
The article mentions Murshidabad and Malda have high deletions. This needs careful handling to avoid any community feeling targeted. Election Commission should explain the criteria clearly to maintain public trust. 🇮🇳
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Priyanka N
Finally! Long overdue exercise to remove duplicate, bogus, and migrated voters. This will strengthen our democracy. Kudos to the judicial officers for their work. Hope other states follow this model.
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David E
Observing from outside, this seems like a standard electoral roll purification process, though the scale is significant. The key is the appeal mechanism - if it's accessible and fair, it should address genuine grievances.
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Kavya N
My relative in North 24 Parganas found his name missing in the draft list! He had to file a claim. The process is stressful for common people. EC should run more awareness campaigns so people can check their status online easily.

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