Bengal Begins Hearings for 32 Lakh 'Unmapped' Voters Amid Political Tensions

Hearings have commenced for approximately 32 lakh voters in West Bengal whose names could not be linked to family members in the 2002 electoral rolls. Political parties, including the BJP and Trinamool Congress, have set up camps to assist voters, with the TMC alleging the process is forcing long-time electors to prove their citizenship. The Election Commission published draft rolls with over 58 lakh names deleted, but a claims period allows for genuine voters to be reinstated. The process involves extensive coordination between district officials and political party agents, with over 300,000 applications for new voter inclusions already received.

Key Points: Bengal SIR Hearings for 32 Lakh Unmapped Voters Begin

  • Hearings for 32 lakh unmapped voters
  • Political parties set up assistance camps
  • TMC alleges forced citizenship proof
  • EC allows claims until Jan 2026
3 min read

SIR hearings for 32 lakh 'unmapped' voters begins in Bengal

Hearings begin for 32 lakh 'unmapped' voters in West Bengal. Political parties assist as TMC alleges voters are forced to prove citizenship.

"People who have been voting for years are now being forced to prove whether they are citizens of this country... - TMC leader Papiya Ghosh"

Siliguri, December 27

The hearings for the Special Intensive Revision electoral rolls of the around 32 lakh unmapped voters, whose names could not be linked to family members in the 2002 Electoral Rolls, commenced on Saturday.

The Bharatiya Janata Party, the Trinamool Congress, and other parties have set up camps to assist voters.

In Siliguri, BJP MLA Sankar Ghosh told ANI, "Here, those people who are called for the hearing from the Siliguri Assembly informed me that there are some minor mismatches. For that, they are called for the hearing and treated as the unmapped voter. I have spoken with them, and they are showing the required documents... They will submit these documents to the hearing officer. They say there is no such problem they have to face in front of the hearing officer. They are confident their name will be listed in the final voter list..."

TMC leader Papiya Ghosh alleged that electors are being forced to prove their citizenship

"What is visible is very dangerous and painful. Everyone who has been coming here since morning has tears in their eyes, and fear on their faces... They have questions in their minds: the Prime Minister was elected with their votes, and the Chief Minister was elected with their votes, so why are they having to endure all this? People who have been voting for years are now being forced to prove whether they are citizens of this country..."

On December 16, the Election Commission published the draft rolls with 58,20,899 electors, accounting for 7.59 per cent, deleted due to death, being untraceable, or permanent migration.

According to a press release by the Election Commission, out of a total 7,66,37,529 voters, 7,08,16,630 electors have submitted their enumeration forms as of December 11.

The poll body stated that genuine electors can still be added back in the electoral rolls during the Claims and Objections period from December 16 to January 15, 2026.

"The successful completion of this phase is the result of coordinated efforts of DEOs of all 24 districts, 294 EROs, 3059 AEROs, and BLOs deployed at 80,681 polling booths, supported by volunteers. Field representatives of all eight recognised political parties, including their District Presidents, also actively participated, with as many as 1,81,454 Booth Level Agents (BLAs) appointed by them," the Chief Electoral Officer of West Bengal said.

The poll body has received 3,24,800 Forms 6 (with or without declaration) so far for inclusion of new electors. After the inquiry and collection of the declaration form, names will be added to the electoral rolls.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
My elderly parents in North Bengal are very anxious about this. They have voted their whole lives and now have to go through this "hearing". It feels humiliating. The system should be more compassionate for senior citizens. 😔
A
Aman W
Good step by EC. Electoral rolls from 2002 are ancient! So much has changed. This revision was long overdue. Parties helping people with documents is a positive thing. Hope the final list is accurate and fair.
S
Sarah B
Working on electoral integrity is crucial for any democracy. The scale of the operation in West Bengal is impressive with so many officials and party agents involved. The key is to ensure the process is transparent and not used to harass legitimate voters.
K
Karthik V
TMC leader's point hits home. Why should a lifelong voter have to *prove* citizenship? The fear and confusion among common people is real. The process must be clear, quick, and respectful. Bureaucracy shouldn't disenfranchise people.
N
Nikhil C
Let's be practical. With crores of voters, some errors are bound to happen in linking old data. The EC has a full month for claims. If your documents are in order, you have nothing to worry about. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳

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

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50