Key Points

The Election Commission of India has finally resolved a 20-year-old issue of duplicate EPIC numbers in voter records. After a nationwide verification, officials found minimal cases averaging just one per four polling stations. The problem originated in 2005 when different states used decentralized numbering systems. All affected voters have now received corrected EPIC cards, though the issue never impacted election outcomes. This cleanup strengthens India's electoral integrity for future polls.

Key Points: ECI Resolves 20-Year Legacy Issue of Similar EPIC Numbers

  • ECI sanitized electoral rolls for 99 crore voters
  • Legacy issue traced back to 2005 decentralization
  • New EPIC cards issued to affected voters
  • No impact on past election results
2 min read

20-year-old legacy issue of similar EPIC numbers resolved: ECI sources

Election Commission fixes long-standing EPIC number errors, ensuring clean electoral rolls for 99 crore voters after nationwide verification.

"The number of similar EPIC numbers found was minuscule, averaging around one in four polling stations. – ECI Sources"

New Delhi, May 13

In its effort to sanitize the electoral rolls and keep them updated, Election Commission of India (ECI) has resolved a nearly 20-year-old legacy issue of similar EPIC numbers which got erroneously issued to genuine electors just because similar series were used by different Electoral Registration Officers (EROs) in such cases since 2005.

ECI Sources said that to resolve this long-pending problem, the entire electoral database of over 99-crore electors was searched by CEOs of all the 36 States/UTs and EROs of all the 4,123 Assembly constituencies across India in all the 10.50 lakh polling stations. On average, there are about 1000 electors per polling station.

The number of similar EPIC numbers found was minuscule, i.e., averaging around one in four polling stations. During the field level verification, it was found that holders of such similar EPIC numbers were genuine electors in different assembly constituencies and different polling stations. All such electors have since been issued new EPIC cards with new numbers.

The genesis of the issue has been traced to 2005, when various States/ UTs were using Assembly Constituency-wise different alphanumeric series in a decentralised manner. These series had to be changed again in 2008, after delimitation of the constituencies. During this period, some ACs erroneously continued to use either the old series or, because of typographic errors, they used the series allotted to some other constituencies.

Every voter's name is in the electoral roll of the polling station, where he/she is an ordinary resident. Having had an EPIC of a similar number never enabled any such person to vote at any other polling station. Thus, the issue of a similar EPIC could not have impacted the results of any elections.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian perspective comments for the article:
R
Rajesh K.
Finally! This was long overdue. The EPIC card is our fundamental voting right document - it should be error-free. Kudos to ECI for cleaning up this mess that's been pending since 2005. Hope they implement better checks now to prevent such issues in future. 🇮🇳
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Priya M.
While I appreciate the effort, it's shocking that such basic errors persisted for 20 years! Shows how our systems need modernization. The article says it didn't affect election results, but can we be 100% sure? Better late than never though.
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Arjun S.
Good work by ECI! But I wonder how many voters with similar EPIC numbers faced problems during elections? My cousin once had his voting rights questioned because of some EPIC mismatch. These small issues matter a lot to common citizens.
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Sunita R.
The scale of this operation is impressive - checking 99 crore voters! Shows our democracy's strength 💪 But why did it take so long? Hope this sets an example for other government departments to clean up their databases too.
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Vikram J.
Typical government work - takes 20 years to fix a numbering issue! But at least they've done it now. Maybe they should link EPIC with Aadhaar to prevent such errors? Though I know many oppose this idea due to privacy concerns.
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Neha P.
This is why we need more tech in governance. If systems were properly digitized and integrated from the beginning, such errors wouldn't happen. Glad it's fixed now, but ECI should invest in better IT infrastructure to prevent future issues.

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