Sun, 5 Jul 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jul 5, 2026 · 14:55
North East News Updated Jul 5, 2026

Women Outnumber Men in Manipur's Latest Draft Electoral Rolls

Women voters have outnumbered men in Manipur's draft electoral rolls, with a gender ratio of 1,057, significantly higher than the national average. The draft rolls, published on July 5, show 19,34,399 registered voters, including 9,93,660 women and 9,40,446 men. Over 1.58 lakh electors were excluded due to deaths, shifting, or being untraceable. The final electoral rolls will be published on September 6 after a claims and objections period.

Women voters continue to outnumber men in Manipur's draft electoral rolls

Imphal, July 5

Women voters have once again outnumbered their male counterparts in Manipur's draft electoral rolls, which were published on Sunday following the completion of the Special Intensive Revision.

After the publication of the draft electoral rolls, Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) Arun Kumar Sinha said that with July 1, 2026, as the qualifying date, Manipur has a total of 19,34,399 registered voters, comprising 9,93,660 women, 9,40,446 men and 293 third-gender electors.

The gender ratio of 1,057 in the draft electoral rolls is significantly higher than the national average, the CEO said.

According to the draft electoral rolls, the number of newly enrolled voters in the 18-19 age group stands at 20,442.

Sinha said that a total of 1,58,677 electors, accounting for 7.58 per cent of the electorate, have been excluded after the revision process due to various reasons. These include the deaths of 43,000 electors (2.05 per cent); 34,740 untraceable or absent electors (1.66 per cent); 72,473 electors who had permanently shifted (3.46 per cent); besides other reasons.

With the creation of 85 new polling stations, the total number of polling stations in the state has increased to 3,041.

Following the completion of the claims and objections process and subsequent verification, the final electoral rolls will be published on September 6.

The CEO said that during the claims and objections period, from July 5 to August 4, any elector or recognised political party may file claims for inclusion of eligible voters or raise objections seeking the deletion of ineligible names from the electoral rolls.

He said that the primary objective of the claims and objections period is to ensure the inclusion of all newly eligible and left-out voters who attained the age of 18 years on or before July 1, 2026. A total of 60 EROs and 84 AEROs will scrutinise the claims and objections received during the stipulated period.

Another key objective is to provide electors with an opportunity to correct errors in their personal particulars and to invite objections against any wrongful inclusion in the electoral rolls, the election official said.

Sinha said the successful completion of this phase was the result of coordinated efforts by the District Election Officers (Deputy Magistrates or Commissioners and Collectors) of all 16 districts, 60 Electoral Registration Officers (EROs), 84 Assistant Electoral Registration Officers (AEROs), 317 BLO Supervisors and 2,956 Booth Level Officers (BLOs) deployed across 2,956 polling stations, with support from volunteers.

Field representatives of all 10 recognised political parties, including their district presidents, also actively participated in the exercise, with as many as 6,363 Booth Level Agents (BLAs) appointed by them, the CEO noted.

He said, "At the beginning of the SIR process, Manipur had only 5,003 BLAs. The increased number of BLAs reflects the active participation of political parties and their representatives in this important electoral exercise."

The BLOs carried out house-to-house visits to all existing electors to distribute Enumeration Forms, followed by at least three rounds of visits to collect the completed forms.

The BLAs also made dedicated efforts to ensure that no eligible elector was left out, Sinha said.

Coordination meetings were held by all 2,956 BLOs with their respective BLAs to ensure thorough field verification of absent, shifted, deceased and duplicate electors. Help desks were set up at the offices of the Chief Electoral Officer and all 16 District Election Officers (DEOs) to assist electors in filling out the Enumeration Forms.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rajesh Q

Good that they've removed over 1.58 lakh ineligible voters, including 43,000 deceased ones. But why were so many people 'untraceable' (34,740)? This raises questions about the BLOs' diligence. Political parties with their 6,363 BLAs should be more active in door-to-door verification. Hope the claims and objections period fixes these gaps.

Sarah B

Impressive that 20,442 young voters aged 18-19 are newly enrolled. This is the future of democracy. Also noteworthy that the CEO mentioned active participation from all 10 recognised political parties. Transparency in electoral rolls is crucial. Let's hope the final rolls on September 6 reflect even more accuracy.

Vikram M

Why are 72,473 people 'permanently shifted' but not removed from the voter list? That's 3.46% of the electorate. Many migrant workers from Manipur may have moved for jobs but remain eligible. The system needs to allow them to vote from their new location. Also, 85 new polling stations is a good step for accessibility.

Nisha Z

Women outnumbering men in Manipur's electoral rolls is a proud moment for the state. It reflects greater female empowerment and participation. But let's not forget the 293 third-gender voters – every vote matters. Kudos to the 2,956 BLOs and 6,363 BLAs for their hard work. 🙏

Aman W

The CEO claims successful completion, but I'm concerned about the 34,740 'untraceable' electors. In a state like Manipur with complex terrain and internal displacement issues, are BLOs doing enough ground work? Also,

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

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked