Election Commission's SIR Drive: 12 States Face Voter Roll Freeze Tonight

The Election Commission is launching a major voter verification drive across 12 states and Union Territories. Electoral rolls will be frozen tonight as part of the Special Intensive Revision process. This comprehensive exercise aims to clean up voter lists by removing duplicate entries and deceased individuals. Booth Level Officers will conduct multiple household visits to ensure accurate voter registration.

Key Points: SIR Voter Verification Begins in 12 States Electoral Rolls Frozen

  • Special Intensive Revision targets 12 states and Union Territories starting Monday
  • Electoral rolls frozen tonight to prevent new registrations during process
  • Booth Level Officers to conduct three household visits for verification
  • Process aims to remove duplicate, deceased, and relocated voters
  • Political parties repeatedly urged voter verification for legitimate elections
  • Digital linking enables voters to verify details against previous records
3 min read

SIR to begin in 12 states, UTs; electoral rolls to be frozen tonight: Election Commission 

Election Commission launches Special Intensive Revision in 12 states/UTs, freezing electoral rolls tonight to eliminate duplicate and deceased voters from lists.

"BLOs will visit every house, three times - Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar"

New Delhi, Oct 27

After a highly successful voter verification process, the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) drive will be undertaken in 12 states/Union Territories (UT)s and the electoral rolls of those respective provinces will be locked tonight, said the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) Gyanesh Kumar on Monday.

Briefing the media about the impending voter list revision exercise, the CEC congratulated the polling officials as well as electors for a successful SIR in Bihar and explained in detail the procedure and rationale of undertaking the ‘purification drive’, from time to time.

The CEC said that since Independence, the SIR has been undertaken in the country as many as 8 times, between 1951 to 2004 and the last one took place in 2004. He added that political parties have been repeatedly urging it to conduct voter verification to ensure only legitimate voters participate in the electoral process.

He said that it is essential to clean the electoral rolls after every few years because of reasons like voter duplication, removal of names of those who have either passed away or have permanently shifted out of the poll-bound state.

Explaining the nitty-gritty of the SIR exercise, the CEC said that the enumeration forms will be printed for those states where this will be undertaken and voters' list of those states will be frozen on Monday night.

Hinting at a pan-India SIR rollout, he said that it was first undertaken in Bihar and will soon be rolled out in other states.

Usually, 1 polling station comprises 1,000 voters. In 1 Assembly, there are 300-400 polling stations, under the supervision of 1 Electoral Registration Officer (ERO). It is under the ERO's guidance that the BLOs work and electoral rolls are prepared and later queried upon.

Further, breaking down the procedure, he informed that the BLOs will first distribute the enumeration forms to electors, enabling them to verify their details on their own via ‘digital linking’ to previous records.

“If there has been no change since 2003, no linking with old EPIC cards needs to be done but those who don’t have names linked to prior records, they will need to submit any of the documents as sought by the poll panel,” he said.

“BLOs will visit every house, three times,” he informed.

Draft and final voter list will be published by EROs and Deputy EROs as it is incumbent upon them to publish error-free electoral rolls.

The CEC also appealed to the 6 national parties to appoint their respective BLOs and said that the Chief Electoral Officers, District Electoral Officers (DROs) and EROs have been asked to hold detailed dialogue with political parties, explaining to them in detail about the ‘purging’ exercise.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Hope this process is smooth for senior citizens. My grandparents find digital processes challenging. BLOs visiting homes is a good step, but hope they're trained properly.
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Sarah B
As someone who recently moved to Delhi from Bangalore, I appreciate this verification drive. It's important my vote gets counted in the right constituency. The digital linking process was quite straightforward!
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Vikram M
Last SIR was in 2004? That's 20 years ago! No wonder there are so many discrepancies in voter lists. Should be done more frequently, maybe every 5 years. Better late than never though!
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Ananya R
While the intention is good, I hope this doesn't become an excuse to remove legitimate voters. In our area, many genuine voters faced issues during last verification. EC should ensure transparency.
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Michael C
The scale of this operation is impressive - 1000 voters per station, 300-400 stations per assembly. Managing this across 12 states shows the EC's organizational capability. Hope other government departments learn from this efficiency.

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