ECI Vows Zero Tolerance for Violence in West Bengal Assembly Elections

The Election Commission of India reviewed preparedness for the upcoming West Bengal Assembly elections in Kolkata, asserting a policy of "zero tolerance" towards violence and voter intimidation. Representatives from major political parties, including the AAP, BJP, CPI(M), Congress, and Trinamool Congress, participated, calling for robust security and CAPF deployment. Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar assured that the polls would be conducted lawfully and transparently, with every effort made to ensure they are free and fair. The Commission also reviewed logistics, EVM management, and directed enforcement agencies to act impartially against inducements.

Key Points: ECI Reviews Poll Prep for West Bengal, Vows Zero Tolerance

  • ECI reviews West Bengal poll prep
  • Political parties urge strict security measures
  • Commission vows zero tolerance for violence
  • Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls ongoing
2 min read

ECI reviews poll preparedness for upcoming Assembly Elections in West Bengal

Election Commission reviews West Bengal poll preparedness, assures free & fair elections with zero tolerance for violence and intimidation of voters.

"zero tolerance towards any form of violence or intimidation - Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar"

Kolkata, March 9

The Election Commission of India on Monday reviewed poll preparedness for the upcoming Assembly elections in West Bengal and asserted that there will be "zero tolerance" towards violence and intimidation of voters or election staff.

As per the press note, Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar, along with Election Commissioners Sukhbir Singh Sandhu and Vivek Joshi, held a detailed review meeting in Kolkata with representatives of recognised national and state political parties as well as senior administrative and police officials.

During the interaction, representatives from parties including the Aam Aadmi Party, Bharatiya Janata Party, Communist Party of India (Marxist), Indian National Congress, National People's Party, All India Forward Bloc and All India Trinamool Congress shared their suggestions with the Commission.

Most political parties appreciated the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in the state and expressed faith in the Commission, the press note said.

However, they also urged the ECI to take strict measures to ensure that voters are not subjected to aggression or intimidation during the elections.

The parties further called for adequate security arrangements, including large-scale deployment of Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF), citing concerns over possible use of crude bombs, illegal firearms, money power and muscle power during the polls. They also suggested that the elections be conducted in one or two phases.

Addressing the concerns, Kumar assured political parties that elections in India are conducted as per the law and the Commission will leave no stone unturned in ensuring free, fair and transparent polls in West Bengal. He reiterated that the ECI will maintain zero tolerance towards any form of violence or intimidation.

The Chief Election Commissioner also said the Special Intensive Revision exercise is being carried out in a transparent manner to ensure that no eligible voter is left out while no ineligible person is included in the electoral rolls. Forms 6, 7 and 8 can still be submitted for additions, deletions or corrections.

Later, the Commission held a detailed review with enforcement agencies, divisional commissioners, district election officers and senior police officials on election planning, EVM management, logistics, training of election staff and law and order preparedness. The Commission directed enforcement agencies to act impartially and clamp down on any inducement-related activities, while district officials were instructed to ensure that assured minimum facilities such as ramps, wheelchairs and drinking water are available at all polling stations.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good to see all major parties attended the meeting. The suggestion for one or two phases makes sense - reduces the window for trouble. But will the administration have the will to act against powerful local goons? That's the real test.
S
Sarah B
The focus on ramps and wheelchairs is a positive, often overlooked detail. Democracy should be accessible to all. Hope the special revision of rolls is as transparent as promised.
A
Arun Y
"Zero tolerance" sounds good on paper. We heard this before every Bengal election. The problem is on-ground implementation. Booth capturing, fake votes, and intimidation are an open secret. The ECI needs to walk the talk this time.
K
Karthik V
The mention of clamping down on "inducement" is key. Money and liquor flow like water during elections here. If the enforcement agencies are truly impartial, it will be a game-changer. Fingers crossed!
M
Meera T
As a Bengali, I just want peace. We are tired of the political violence that disrupts normal life. Let people choose their government without crude bombs and threats. Jai Hind.

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