Bengal Voter List: 40% of Adjudicated Cases Found Excludable, Total Deletions Near 77 Lakh

The Election Commission of India has completed the judicial adjudication process for 32 lakh out of 60 lakh voter cases flagged for discrepancies in West Bengal. Of these, roughly 40% (about 12.8 lakh cases) have been found excludable, bringing the total number of deleted voter names to approximately 77 lakh. Voters deemed excludable can appeal to one of 19 constituted Appellate Tribunals. Meanwhile, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has accused the ECI of harassing people and targeting tribal and backward communities through the revision exercise.

Key Points: Bengal Voter List: 40% Cases Excludable in Judicial Review

  • 32 lakh cases adjudicated
  • 40% found excludable
  • Total deletions near 77 lakh
  • Mamata Banerjee criticizes ECI
  • Appellate Tribunals available for appeal
2 min read

Bengal SIR: Judicial adjudication process completed for 32 lakh cases, 40 pc found excludable

ECI completes judicial adjudication for 32 lakh Bengal voter cases; 40% found excludable. Total deletions near 77 lakh as Mamata Banerjee criticizes the process.

"unnecessarily harassing the people of the state through this revision exercise - Mamata Banerjee"

Kolkata, March 25

The Election Commission of India, on Wednesday evening, informed that of the 60 lakh cases classified under the "logical discrepancy" category, the judicial adjudication process has been completed for 32 lakh cases till Tuesday night by the judicial officer appointed for the process.

This means that the process of having been completed for roughly 53 per cent of the total cases referred for judicial adjudication in the state, informed an insider from the office of the Chief Electoral Officer (CEO), West Bengal.

Again, out of the 32 lakh cases for which the judicial adjudication process has been completed till Tuesday night, roughly around 28.8 lakh (40 per cent) have been found excludable.

However, these voters who have been found excludable will have the chance to approach any one of the 19 Appellate Tribunals constituted for that purpose.

Currently, the judicial adjudication process is being conducted by over 700 judicial officers, including 100 each from neighbouring Odisha and Jharkhand.

To recall, the final voters' list in West Bengal, minus those 60 lakh odd cases which were referred for judicial adjudication, was published on February 28, where a total of 63,66,952 names were already deleted.

Now, with around 12.80 lakhs being found excludable in the course of judicial adjudication, the total deleted names as on Tuesday night stand at around 77 lakh.

Before the notification of the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) was issued for West Bengal in November last year, the total number of voters in West Bengal 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 2828, the deletion figure increased to 63,66,952.

Even on Wednesday, while addressing an election rally in North Bengal, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee accused the ECI of unnecessarily harassing the people of the state through this revision exercise. She also accused the Commission of specially targeting people from the tribal and backward class communities in the name of the SIR.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While cleaning the voter list is important, Mamata Banerjee's point about harassment cannot be ignored. In a state with high migration for work, people might be wrongly excluded. The 19 Appellate Tribunals better be easily accessible. 🙏
S
Suresh O
Good step by ECI. A clean electoral roll is the foundation of a fair election. If 40% of adjudicated cases are excludable, it shows how much bloating was there. Hope this sets a precedent for other states too.
A
Anjali F
The numbers are confusing. First 63 lakh deleted, now another 12.8 lakh... totaling 77 lakh. From a total of 7.66 crore voters? That's about 10% of the list! This needs simpler explanation for common people like us.
D
David E
Interesting to see judicial officers from Odisha and Jharkhand involved. Brings some neutrality to the process. The appellate tribunal mechanism is crucial - everyone deserves a fair chance to prove their eligibility.
K
Kavya N
The CM's allegation about targeting tribal and backward communities is serious. The ECI must proactively release data on the demographic profile of those excluded to clear the air. Transparency is the best answer to politics.

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