Bengal Voter Roll Scandal: 94 Lakh Fake Voter Cases Exposed by ECI

The Election Commission of India has identified approximately 94 lakh cases of "logical discrepancies" in West Bengal's draft electoral roll, primarily involving fake voters falsely linking themselves to genuine voters through fabricated family relationships. Officials provided examples, including a senior citizen listed as having eight to ten children when they actually had two, and a 64-year-old voter shown as the father of 60 and 59-year-old sons. The ECI is conducting hearings despite criticism from some political parties, aiming to clean the roll before the upcoming assembly elections. The final voters' list will be published on February 14, after which poll dates for the crucial state election are expected to be announced.

Key Points: ECI Finds 94 Lakh Voter Discrepancies in West Bengal Roll

  • 94 lakh logical discrepancy cases found
  • Fake voters linked to genuine ones
  • Hearings continue until February 7
  • Final roll to be published February 14
2 min read

Bengal SIR: ECI explains why 'logical discrepancy' cases are abnormally high

Election Commission uncovers massive voter roll manipulation in Bengal with 94 lakh "logical discrepancy" cases ahead of state polls.

"The objective is to ensure that not a single genuine voter is excluded, while also ensuring that no forged or fake voter remains on the electoral roll. - ECI Official"

Kolkata, Jan 19

Amid allegations that the Election Commission of India has been indiscriminately issuing notices for hearings on claims and objections to the draft electoral roll in West Bengal, the Commission has explained why the number of cases flagged as "logical discrepancies" in the state is unusually high.

The ECI has identified around 94 lakh "logical discrepancy" cases in West Bengal. Such cases refer to anomalies detected during progeny mapping, where implausible or inconsistent family relationships appear in voter records.

Officials in the office of the Chief Electoral Officer (CEO), West Bengal, cited several examples to illustrate how fake voters attempted to retain their names on the electoral roll by falsely linking themselves to unrelated genuine voters.

"There have been cases where eight to ten voters were shown as sons or daughters of a single senior citizen voter during progeny mapping. However, during hearings, it was found that the senior citizen had only two children and had no blood relationship with most of those listed as his sons or daughters," said an official from the CEO's office.

According to officials, such manipulation was aimed at ensuring that fake voters remained on the rolls by presenting themselves as siblings within a fabricated family structure linked to a genuine voter.

In another instance, the Commission came across a case involving a 64-year-old senior citizen voter who was shown as having two sons aged 60 and 59.

"This would mean the voter became a father at the age of five," the official said. Subsequent verification revealed that both individuals listed as his sons were fake voters who had falsely linked themselves to the genuine voter to avoid deletion from the electoral roll.

Officials acknowledged that the Commission has faced criticism from some political parties for summoning voters -- particularly senior citizens -- for hearings, triggering protests in parts of the state.

"However, such criticism cannot compel the Commission to ignore glaring discrepancies," the official said. "The objective is to ensure that not a single genuine voter is excluded, while also ensuring that no forged or fake voter remains on the electoral roll."

The deadline for submission of claims and objections to the draft voters' list expires on Monday. Hearing sessions will continue until February 7, and the final voters' list will be published on February 14.

Shortly thereafter, the ECI is expected to announce polling dates for the crucial West Bengal Assembly elections scheduled later this year.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rahul R
A father at age 5? Seriously? 😂 This is the level of manipulation we are dealing with. Full support to ECI for taking action, even if it causes some temporary inconvenience. We need a clean voter list.
S
Suresh O
While the intent to clean the rolls is good, summoning senior citizens for hearings is causing genuine hardship. The ECI should find a more citizen-friendly method for verification. The process must be robust but also compassionate.
A
Ananya R
This progeny mapping technology seems to be working! Exposing these fake family trees is crucial. Hope they complete the process fairly before the elections. Bengal needs a free and fair poll.
D
David E
Following this from abroad. It's fascinating to see the scale of the challenge. 9.4 million discrepancies is a massive number. Shows the importance of strong, independent institutions like the ECI.
K
Karthik V
The political parties crying foul now are probably the ones who benefited from these fake votes all these years. ECI should stay firm. Jai Hind!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50